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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The African Colony, by John Buchan.
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The African Colony, by John Buchan
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The African Colony
+ Studies in the Reconstruction
+
+Author: John Buchan
+
+Release Date: December 2, 2010 [EBook #34548]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AFRICAN COLONY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Rachael Schultz and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="tnborder">
+<p class="tntitle">TRANSCRIBER&rsquo;S NOTE</p>
+
+<p>This text includes several lines of Greek; you made need to adjust your
+font settings in order for them to display properly. If you place your
+mouse pointer over the Greek lines, the transliteration will appear.
+Omitted page numbers reference blank pages in the original text.
+Footnotes are marked with a number in brackets (e.g., [1]) and appear
+at the end of their respective chapter or section. Alphabetic links
+were added to the index for easier navigation. Punctuation has been
+standardized throughout the text. For details on typographical
+corrections, please refer to the <a href="#endnote">note</a> at the end of the text.</p>
+</div>
+
+<h1 class="padtop">THE AFRICAN COLONY</h1>
+
+<p class="center midfont padbase">STUDIES IN THE RECONSTRUCTION</p>
+
+<p class="center padtop smlfont">BY</p>
+
+<h2 class="padbase">JOHN BUCHAN</h2>
+
+<p class="pub"><span class="midfont">WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS</span><br />
+EDINBURGH AND LONDON<br />
+MCMIII</p>
+
+<hr class="mid" />
+
+
+<p class="ded">TO THE<br />
+HONOURABLE<br />
+<span class="lrgfont">HUGH ARCHIBALD WYNDHAM,</span><br />
+IN MEMORY OF<br />
+OUR AFRICAN HOUSEKEEPING.</p>
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+
+<p class="opquote">&ldquo;The greatest honour that ever belonged to the greatest
+Monarkes was the inlarging their Dominions, and erecting
+Commonweales.&rdquo;&mdash;Captain <span class="smcap">John Smith</span>.</p>
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Table of Contents">
+ <tr class="trshort">
+ <td class="tdr tinyfont" colspan="3">PAGE</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdl">INTRODUCTORY</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_ix">ix</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdc1">PART I.</td>
+ <td class="tdrind">&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdc2">THE EARLIER MASTERS.</td>
+ <td class="tdrind">&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdlind tdshort tinyfont" colspan="3">CHAP.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">I.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">PRIMITIVE SOUTH AFRICA</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_3">3</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">II.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE GENTLEMEN-ADVENTURERS</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">III.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE GREAT TREK</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">IV.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE BOER IN SPORT</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">V.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE BOER IN ALL SERIOUSNESS</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_58">58</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdc1">PART II.</td>
+ <td class="tdrind">&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdc2">NOTES OF TRAVEL.</td>
+ <td class="tdrind">&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">VI.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">EVENING ON THE HIGH VELD</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">VII.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">IN THE TRACKS OF WAR</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">VIII.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE WOOD BUSH</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_113">113</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">IX.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">ON THE EASTERN VELD</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">X.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE GREAT NORTH ROAD</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_146">146</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">XI.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE FUTURE OF SOUTH AFRICAN SPORT</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_168">168</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdc1">PART III.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span>
+ </td>
+ <td class="tdrind">&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdc2">THE POLITICAL PROBLEM.</td>
+ <td class="tdrind">&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">XII.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE ECONOMIC FACTOR</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">XIII.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE SETTLEMENT OF THE LAND</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_255">255</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">XIV.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE SUBJECT RACES</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_284">284</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">XV.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">JOHANNESBURG</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_311">311</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">XVI.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">CONSTITUTIONAL QUESTIONS</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_325">325</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">XVII.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE POLICY OF FEDERATION</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_348">348</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">XVIII.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE ARMY AND SOUTH AFRICA</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_368">368</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr">XIX.</td>
+ <td class="tdl">THE FUTURE OUTLOOK</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_386">386</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdc1">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="tdl">INDEX</td>
+ <td class="tdrind"><a href="#Page_400">400</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>INTRODUCTORY.</h2>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<p>On the last day of May 1902 the signature at Pretoria
+of the conditions of peace brought to an end a war
+which had lasted for nearly three years, and had
+among other things destroyed a government, dissolved
+a society, and laid waste a country. In those last
+months of fighting some progress had been made with
+the reconstruction&mdash;at least with that not unimportant
+branch of it which is concerned with the machinery of
+government. A working administration had been put
+together, new ordinances in the form of proclamations
+had been issued, departments had been created and
+the chief appointments made, the gold industry was
+beginning to set its house in order, refugees were
+returning, and already political theories were being
+mooted and future parties foreshadowed. But it is
+from the conclusion of peace that the work of resettlement
+may fairly be taken to commence. Before that
+date the restrictions of war limited all civil activity;
+not till the shackles were removed and the civil power
+left in sole possession does a fair field appear either
+for approval or criticism.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span>
+It is not my purpose to write the history of the
+reconstruction. The work is still in process, and a decade
+later it may be formally completed. Fifty years
+hence it may be possible to look back and discriminate
+on its success or failure. The history when it is
+written will be an interesting book. It will among
+other matters deal with the work of repatriation, one
+of the most curious and quixotic burdens ever borne
+by a nation, and one, I believe, to which no real
+parallel can be found. It will concern itself with the
+slow and difficult transference from military to civil
+government, the renascence of the common law, the
+first revival of trade and industry, the restitution of
+prisoners, and the return of refugees&mdash;all matters of
+interest and novel precedents in our history. It will
+recognise more clearly than is at present possible the
+problems which faced South Africa at the time, and
+it will be in the happy position of judging from the
+high standpoint of accomplished fact. But in the
+meantime, when we have seen barely eighteen months
+of reconstruction, history is out of the question. Yet
+even in the stress of work it is often sound policy for
+a man to halt for a moment and collect his thoughts.
+There must be some diagnosis of the problem before
+him, the end to which his work is directed, the conditions
+under which he labours. While it is useless
+to tell the story of a task before it is done, it is often
+politic to re-examine the difficulties and to get the
+mind clear as to what the object of all this strife and
+expense of money and energy may be. Ideals are all
+very well in their way, but they are apt to become
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span>
+very dim lamps unless often replenished from the
+world of facts and trimmed and adjusted by wholesome
+criticism.</p>
+
+<p>Such a modest diagnosis is the aim of the present
+work. I have tried in the main to state as clearly
+as I could the outstanding problems of South African
+politics as they appear to one observer. I say &ldquo;in
+the main,&rdquo; because I am aware that I have been
+frequently led against my intention to express an
+opinion on more than one such problem, and in
+several cases to suggest a policy. I can only plead
+that it is almost impossible to keep a statement of
+a case uncoloured by one&rsquo;s own view of the solution,
+and that it is better to give frankly a judgment,
+however worthless, than to allow a bias to
+influence insensibly the presentation of facts. For
+such views, which are my own, I claim no value;
+for facts, in so far as they are facts, I hope I may
+beg some little attention. They are the fruit of
+first-hand, and, I trust, honest observation. Every
+statement of a case is, indeed, a personal one,
+representing the writer&rsquo;s own estimate rather than
+objective truth, but in all likelihood it is several
+degrees nearer the truth than the same writer&rsquo;s
+policies or prophecies. South Africa has been in
+the world&rsquo;s eye for half a century, and in the last
+few years her problems have been so complex that
+it has been difficult to separate the permanent from
+the transitory, or to look beyond the mass of local
+difficulties to the abiding needs of the sub-continent
+as a whole. Colonial opinion has been neglected at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span>
+home; English opinion has been misunderstood in
+the colonies. It may be of interest to try to
+estimate her chief needs and to understand her
+thoughts, for it is only thus that we can forecast
+that future which she and she alone must make
+for herself.</p>
+
+<p>Every one who approaches the consideration of
+the politics of a country which is not his own, and
+in which he is at best a stranger, must feel a certain
+diffidence. On many matters it is impossible
+that he should judge correctly. What seems to
+him a simple fact is complicated, it may be, by a
+thousand unseen local currents which no one can
+allow for except the old inhabitant. For this reason
+an outside critic will be wrong in innumerable details,
+and even, it is probable, in certain broad
+questions of principle. But aloofness may have
+the qualities of its defects. A critic on a neighbouring
+hill-top will be a poor guide to the flora
+and fauna of the parish below; but he may be a
+good authority on its contours, on the height of
+its hills and the number of its rivers, and he may,
+perhaps, be a better judge of the magnitude of a
+thunderstorm coming out of the west than the
+parishioner in his garden. The insistence of certain
+South African problems, familiar to us all, has made
+any synthetic survey difficult for the South African
+and impossible for the newspaper reader at home.
+We have forgotten that it is a country with a
+history, that it is a land where men can live as
+well as wrangle and fight, that it has sport, traditions,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</a></span>
+charm of scenery and weather; and in its
+politics we are apt to see the problems under a few
+popular categories, rather as a war of catchwords
+than the birth-pangs of a people. I have attempted
+in the following pages to give this synthesis at the
+expense, I am afraid, of completeness of detail. It
+is my hope that some few readers may find utility
+even in an imperfect general survey as a corrective
+and a supplement to the many able expositions of
+single problems.</p>
+
+<p>The title begs a question which it is the aim of the
+later chapters to answer. South Africa is in reality
+one colony, and it can only be a matter of years till
+this radical truth is formally recognised in a federation.
+But some explanation is necessary for the fact
+that most of the book is occupied with a discussion of
+the new colonies and with problems which, for the
+present, may seem to exist only for them. At this
+moment the settlement of the Transvaal and the
+Orange River Colony is the most vital South African
+problem. On their success or failure depends the
+whole future of the sub-continent. They show, not
+in embryo, but in the strongest light and the clearest
+and most mature form, every South African question.
+On them depends the future wealth of the country
+and any marked increase in its population. They will
+be forced by their position to be in the van of South
+African progress, and to give the lead in new methods
+of expansion and development. We are therefore
+fortunate in possessing in the politics of these colonies
+an isolated and focussed observation-ground, a page
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[Pg xiv]</a></span>
+where we can read in large clear type what is elsewhere
+blurred and written over. I do not suppose
+that this fact would be denied by any of the
+neighbouring colonies; indeed the tendency in those
+states is to manifest an undue interest in the affairs
+of the Transvaal, and to see often, in matters which
+are purely local, questions of far-reaching South
+African interest. On the ultimate dominance of the
+Transvaal opinion naturally differs, and indeed it is
+a point not worth insisting on, save as a further
+argument for federation. If South African interests
+are so inextricably intertwined, it is clearly desirable
+to have a colony, whose future is obscure but whose
+wealth and power are at least potentially very great,
+brought formally into a union where each colony will
+be one unit and no more, rather than allow it to exist
+in isolation, unamenable to advice from sister states
+and wholly self-centred and unsympathetic. It is
+sufficient justification for the method I have employed
+if it is admitted that the Transvaal question is the
+South African problem in its most complete and
+characteristic form.</p>
+
+<p>A word remains to be said on the arrangement of
+the chapters. I have tried to write what is a kind
+of guide-book, not to details, but to the constituents
+of that national life which is now in process of growth.
+The reader I have had in mind is the average Englishman
+who, in seeking to be informed about a country,
+asks for something more than the dry bones of
+statistics&mdash;<i>l&rsquo;homme moyen politique</i>, who wants a
+<i>résumé</i> of the political problem, some guide to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[Pg xv]</a></span>
+historical influences which have been or are still
+potent, an idea of landscape and national character
+and modes of life. He does not ask for a history,
+nor does he want a disquisition on this or that
+question, or a brief for this or that policy, but, being
+perfectly competent to make up his own mind, he
+wants the materials for judgment. The first part
+consists of brief historical sketches, dealing with the
+genesis of the three populations&mdash;native, uitlander,
+and Boer. The history of South Africa, with all
+deference to the learned and voluminous works of
+Dr Theal, can never be adequately written. Her
+past appears to us in a series of vanishing pictures,
+without continuity or connection. I have therefore
+avoided any attempt at a consecutive tale, as I have
+avoided such topics as the War and the negotiations
+preceding it, and treated a few historical influences
+in a brief episodic form. In the second part the
+configuration of the land has been dealt with in a
+similar way. A series of short sketches, of the class
+which the French call &ldquo;<i>carnets de voyage</i>,&rdquo; seemed
+more suitable than any attempt at the work of a
+gazetteer. I am so convinced of the beauty and
+healthfulness of the land that I may have been
+betrayed into an over-minute description: my one
+excuse is that in this branch of my task I have had
+few predecessors.</p>
+
+<p>The third part is highly controversial in character,
+and is presented with grave hesitation. Many books
+and pamphlets have informed us on those years of
+South African history between the Raid and the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[Pg xvi]</a></span>
+Ultimatum, and a still greater number have discussed
+every phase and detail of the war. Another book on
+so hackneyed a matter may seem hard to justify. It
+may be urged, however, that the question has taken
+a wholly different form. Of late years it has been
+complicated by a division of opinion based not only
+on political but on moral grounds, an opposition in
+theories of national duty, of international ethics, of
+civic integrity. South African policy before the war
+and during the actual conduct of hostilities was by a
+considerable section of the English people not judged
+on political grounds, but condemned or applauded in
+the one case on moral pretexts and in the other
+on the common grounds of patriotism. The danger
+of making the moral criterion bulk aggressively
+in politics is that the criticism so desirable for
+all policies is neglected or perfunctorily performed.
+Matters which, to be judged truly, must be tried by
+the canons of the province to which they belong,
+are hastily approved or as hastily damned on some
+wholly alien test. But with the end of the war and
+the beginning of civil government it seems to me
+that this vice must tend to disappear. Whatever
+our judgment on the past, there is a living and
+insistent problem for the present. Whatever the
+verdict on our efforts to meet the problem, it must
+be based on political grounds. We are now in a
+position to criticise, if not adequately, at least fairly
+and on a logical basis. But the old data require
+revision. The war has been a chemical process which
+has so changed the nature of the old constituents
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[Pg xvii]</a></span>
+that they are unrecognisable in a new analysis. I
+am encouraged to hope that a sketch of the political
+problem as it has to be faced in South Africa to-day
+will not be without a certain value to those who
+desire to inform themselves on what is the most
+interesting of modern imperial experiments. It is
+too often assumed in England that the real difficulties
+preceded war, and that the course of policy, though
+not unattended with risks, is now comparatively
+clear and easy. It would be truer to say that the
+real difficulty has only now begun. I shall be
+satisfied if I can convince some of my readers that
+the work to be done in South Africa is exceedingly
+delicate and arduous, requiring a high measure of
+judgment and tact and patience; that it is South
+Africa&rsquo;s own problem which she must settle for herself;
+and above all, that while the result of success
+will be more far-reaching and vital to the future of
+the English race than is commonly realised, the
+consequences of failure will be wholly disastrous to
+any vision of Empire.</p>
+
+<p>To my friends in South Africa I owe an apology
+for my audacity in undertaking to pronounce upon
+a country of which my experience is limited. Had
+I not always found them ready to welcome outside
+criticism, however imperfect, when honestly made,
+and to hear with commendable patience a newcomer&rsquo;s
+views, however crude, I should have hesitated long
+before making the attempt. I have endeavoured
+to give a plain statement of local opinion, which is
+expert opinion, and therefore worthy of the first
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[Pg xviii]</a></span>
+consideration, and, though there are phases of it
+with which I am not in sympathy, I trust I may
+claim to have given on many matters the colonial
+view, when such a view has attained consistency and
+clearness. But my chief excuse is that while local
+opinion is still in the making, and politics are still
+in the flux which attends a reconstruction, the outside
+spectator may in all modesty claim to have a
+voice. It may be easier for a man coming fresh to
+a new world to judge it correctly than for those ex-inhabitants
+of that older world on whose wreckage
+the new is built.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>PART I.<br />
+<br />
+THE EARLIER MASTERS</h2>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2"><!-- blank page --></a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+<h4>PRIMITIVE SOUTH AFRICA.</h4>
+
+<p>There are kinds of history which a modern education
+ignores, and which a modern mind is hardly trained
+to understand. We can interest ourselves keenly in
+the first vagaries of embryo humankind; and for savagery,
+which is a hunting-ground for the sociologist
+and the folk-lorist, we have an academic respect. But
+for savagery naked and not ashamed, fighting its own
+battles and ruling its own peoples, we reserve an
+interest only when it reaches literary record in a
+saga. Otherwise it is for us neither literature nor
+history&mdash;a kind of natural event like a thunderstorm,
+of possible political importance, but of undoubted
+practical dulness. Most men have never heard of
+Vechtkop or Mosega, and know Tchaka and Dingaan
+and Moshesh only as barbarous names. And yet
+this is a history of curious interest and far-reaching
+significance: the chronicle of Tchaka&rsquo;s deeds is an
+epic, and we still feel the results of his iron arguments.
+The current attitude is part of a general
+false conception of South African conditions. To most
+men she is a country without history, or, if she has
+a certain barbarous chronicle, it is without significance.
+The truth is nearly at the opposite pole.
+South Africa is bound to the chariot-wheels of her
+past, and that past is intricately varied&mdash;a museum
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+of the wrecks of conquerors and races, joining hands
+with most quarters of the Old World. More, it is
+the place where savagery is most intimately linked
+with latter-day civilisation. Ph&oelig;nician, Arab, Portuguese,
+Dutch, and English&mdash;that is her Uitlander
+cycle; and a cynic might say that she has ended as
+she began, with the Semitic. And meantime there
+were great native conquests surging in the interior
+while the adventurer was nibbling at her coasts;
+and when we were busy in one quarter abolishing
+slavery and educating the Kaffir, in another there
+were wars more bloody than Timour&rsquo;s, and annihilation
+of races more terrible than Attila ever dreamed
+of. We see, before our faces, &ldquo;the rudiments of tiger
+and baboon, and know that the barriers of races are
+not so firm but that spray can sprinkle us from antediluvian
+seas.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>To realise this intricate history and its modern
+meaning is the first South African problem. No
+man can understand the land unless he takes it as it
+is, a place instinct with tradition, where every problem
+is based upon the wreckage of old strifes. And
+to the mere amateur the question is full of interest.
+The history of South Africa can never be written.
+The materials are lost, and all we possess are fleeting
+glimpses, outcrops of fact on the wide plains of tradition,
+random guesses, stray relics which suggest without
+enlightening. We see races emerge and vanish,
+with a place-name or a tomb as their only memorial;
+but bequeathing something, we know not what, to
+the land and their successors. And at the end of the
+roll come the first white masters of the land, the
+Dutch, whom it is impossible to understand except
+in relation to the country which they conquered and
+the people they superseded. We have unthinkingly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+set down one of the most curious side-products of the
+human family as a common race of emigrants, and
+the result has been one long tale of misapprehension.
+It is this overlapping of counter-civilisations, this
+mosaic of the prehistoric and the recent, which gives
+South African history its piquancy and its character.
+It is no tale of old populous cities and splendid empires,
+no story of developing civilisations and conflicting
+philosophies; only a wild half-heard legend of
+men who come out of the darkness for a moment, of
+shapes warring in a mist for centuries, till the curtain
+lifts and we recognise the faces of to-day.</p>
+
+<p>Two views have been held on the subject of the
+present native population. One is that it represents
+the end of a long line of development; the other that
+it is the nadir of a process of retrogression. The
+supporters of the second view point to the growing
+weakness of all Kaffir languages in inflexions and
+structural forms, while in the Hottentot-Bushman
+survival they see a degeneration from a more masculine
+type. It is impossible to dogmatise on such a
+matter. Degeneration and advance are not fixed
+processes, but recur in cycles in the history of every
+nation. The Bushman, one of the lowest of created
+types, may well be the original creature of the soil,
+advancing in halting stages from the palæolithic man;
+himself practically a being of the Stone Age, and
+prohibited from further progress by an arid and unfriendly
+land, and the advent of stronger races. Of
+the palæolithic man, who 200,000 years ago or thereabout
+made his home in the river drifts, we have
+geological records similar to those found in the valleys
+of the Somme and the Thames. On the banks of the
+Buffalo at East London, in a gravel deposit 70 feet
+above the present river-bed, there have been found
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+rude human implements of greenstone, the age of
+which may be measured by the time the river has
+taken to wear down 70 feet of hard greenstone dyke.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
+From the palæolithic it is a step of a few millenniums
+to the neolithic man, who has left his relics in the
+shell-heaps and kitchen-middens at the mouth of the
+same stream&mdash;who, indeed, till a few generations ago
+was an inhabitant of the land. The Bushman was a
+dweller in the Stone Age, for, though he knew a little
+about metals, stone implements were in daily use,
+and, with his kinsmen the Pigmies of Central Africa,
+he represented a savagery compared with which the
+Kaffir races are civilised. It is his skull which is
+found in the shell-heaps by the river-sides. He was
+a miserable fellow, a true troglodyte, small, emaciated,
+with protruding chest and spindle legs. He lived
+by hunting of the most primitive kind, killing game
+with his poisoned arrows. He had no social organisation,
+no knowledge of husbandry or stock-keeping,
+and save for his unrivalled skill in following spoor
+and a rude elementary art which is shown in the
+Bushman pictures on some of the rocks in the western
+districts, he was scarcely to be distinguished from
+the beasts he hunted. A genuine neolithic man,
+and therefore worthy of all attention. In other lands
+his wild contemporaries have gone; in South Africa
+the elephant, the rhinoceros, and the buffalo survive
+to give the background to our picture of his life. He
+himself has perished, or all but perished. The Dutch
+farmers hunted him down and shot him at sight, for
+indeed he was untamable. His blood has probably
+mixed with the Hottentot and the Koranna; and in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+some outland parts of the Kalahari and the great
+wastes along the lower Orange he may survive in
+twos and threes.</p>
+
+<p>Originally he covered all the south-west corner of
+Africa, but in time he had to retire from the richer
+coast lands in favour of a people a little higher in the
+scale of civilisation. The origin of the Hottentots is
+shrouded in utter mystery, but we find them in possession
+when the first Portuguese and Dutch explorers
+reached the coast. They, too, were an insignificant
+race, but so far an advance upon their predecessors
+that they were shepherds, owning large herds of
+sheep and horned cattle, and roaming over wide tracts
+in search of pasture. They had a tribal organisation,
+and a certain domesticity of nature which, while it
+made them an easy prey to warrior tribes, enabled
+them to live side by side with the Dutch immigrants
+as herdsmen and house-servants. The pure breed
+disappeared, but their blood remains in the Cape
+boy, that curious mixed race part white, part Malay,
+part Hottentot. Both Bushman and Hottentot, having
+within them no real vitality, have perished utterly
+as peoples: in Emerson&rsquo;s words, they &ldquo;had guano in
+their destiny,&rdquo; and were fated only to prepare the
+way for their successors.</p>
+
+<p>For the rest the history of primitive South Africa is
+a history of the Bantu tribes but for one curious exception.
+In the districts now included in the general
+name of Rhodesia, stretching from the Zambesi to the
+Limpopo, we find authentic record of an old and
+mysterious civilisation compared with which all African
+empires, save Egypt, are things of yesterday. Over
+five hundred ruins, showing in the main one type,
+though a type which can be differentiated in stages,
+are hidden among the hollows and stony hills of that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+curious country. Livingstone and Baines first called
+the world&rsquo;s attention to those monuments, and Mr
+Bent, in his &lsquo;Ruined Cities of Mashonaland,&rsquo; provided
+the first working theory of their origin. Since that
+date many savants, from Dr Schlichter to Professor
+Keane, have elaborated the hypothesis, for in the
+present state of our knowledge a hypothesis it remains.
+In those ruins, or Zimbabwes, to use the generic Bantu
+name, three distinct periods have been traced, and a
+fourth period, when it is supposed that local tribes
+began to imitate the Zimbabwe style of architecture.
+The features of this architecture are simple, and consist
+chiefly of immense thickness of wall ornamented with
+a herring-bone, a chess-board, and in a few instances a
+diaper pattern, enclosures entered by narrow winding
+passages, and in some cases conical towers similar to
+the Sardinian <i>nauraghes</i>. The discoveries by excavation
+have not been many, mainly fragments of gold
+and gold-dust, certain bowls of soapstone and wood
+ornamented with geometrical patterns and figures
+which may represent the signs of the zodiac, some
+curious figures of birds, stone objects which may be
+<i>phalli</i>, and rude stones which may be the sacred <i>betyli</i>.
+It is difficult to judge of the purpose of the buildings.
+Some suggest forts, some temples, some factories, some
+palaces: perhaps they may be all combined, such as
+we know the early Ionian and Ph&oelig;nician adventurers
+built in a new land.</p>
+
+<p>From the remains themselves little light comes, but
+we have a certain assistance from known history. In
+early days, before the Ph&oelig;nicians came to the Mediterranean
+seaboard, their precursors, the Sabæo-Arabians
+or Himyarites of South Arabia, were the great commercial
+people of the East. There was undoubtedly a
+large trade in gold and ivory with Africa, and all
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+records point to somewhere on the Mozambique coast
+as the port from which the precious metal was shipped.
+The only place whence gold in great quantities could
+have come is the central tableland of Rhodesia, from
+which it has been estimated that the ancient output
+was of the value of at least 75 millions. The temple
+of Haram of Bilkis, near Marib, as described by Müller,
+has an extraordinary resemblance both in architecture
+and the relics found in it to the Great Zimbabwe.
+According to Professor Keane, the Sabæans reached
+Rhodesia by way of Madagascar, and he finds in the
+Malagasy language traces of their presence. Ophir he
+places in the south of Arabia, the emporium to which
+the gold was brought for distribution; Tarshish, the
+port of embarkation, he identifies with Sofala; and he
+finds in Rhodesia the ancient Havilah. Others place
+Ophir in Rhodesia itself. According to the Portuguese
+writer Conto, Mount Fura in Rhodesia was called by
+the Arabs Afur, and some see in the names of Sofala
+and the Sabi river a reference to Ophir and Sheba.
+Etymological proofs are always suspicious, save in cases
+like this where they are merely supplementary to a vast
+quantity of collateral evidence. When the Ph&oelig;nicians
+succeeded to the commercial empire of the Sabæans,
+they took over the land of Ophir, and to them the
+bulk of the Zimbabwes are to be attributed. Those
+later Zimbabwes and the Sardinian <i>nauraghes</i>, which
+are almost certainly Ph&oelig;nician in origin, have many
+points of resemblance. The traces of litholatry and
+phallic worship are Ph&oelig;nician, the soapstone birds
+may be the vultures of Astarte, and the rosette
+decorations on the stone cylinders are found in the
+Ph&oelig;nician temple of Paphos and the great temple of
+the Sun at Emesa.</p>
+
+<p>Such are a few of the proofs advanced on behalf of a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+hypothesis which is in itself highly probable.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> It is
+not a history of generations but of æons, and we
+cannot tell what were the fortunes of that mysterious
+land from the days when the Ph&oelig;nician power
+dwindled away to the time when the Portuguese
+discovered the gold mines and framed wild legends
+about Monomotapa. The most probable theory is that
+the old Semitic settlers mingled their blood with the
+people of the land, and as the trade outlets became
+closed a native tribe took the place of the proud
+Ph&oelig;nician merchants. In the words of Mr Selous,
+&ldquo;the blood of the ancient builders of Zimbabwe still
+runs, in a very diluted form, in the veins of the Bantu
+races, and more especially among the remnants of the
+tribes still living in Mashonaland and the Barotsi of
+the Upper Zambesi.&rdquo; The Makalanga, or Children of
+the Sun, whom Barreto fought, were in the line of
+succession from the Ph&oelig;nicians, as the Mashonas are
+their representatives to-day. In Mashona pottery we
+can still trace the decorations, which are found on the
+walls of the Zimbabwes: the people have something
+Semitic in their features, as compared with other
+Bantu tribes; they know something of gold-working,
+a little of astronomy, and in their industries and
+beliefs have a higher culture than their neighbours.
+Their chiefs have dynastic names; each tribe has a
+form of totemism in which some have seen Arabian
+influences; and in certain matters of religion, such as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+the sacrifice of black bulls and the observation of days
+of rest, they suggest Semitic customs. So, if this
+hypothesis be true, we are presented with a survival
+of the oldest of civilisations in the heart of modern
+barbarism. The traveller, who sees in the wilds of
+Manicaland a sacrifice of oxen to the Manes of the
+tribe, sees in a crude imitation the rites which the
+hook-nosed, dark-eyed adventurers brought from the
+old splendid cities of the Mediterranean, where with
+wild music and unspeakable cruelties and lusts the
+votaries of Baal and Astarte celebrated the cycle of
+the seasons and the mysteries of the natural world&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Imperishable fire under the boughs<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of chrysoberyl and beryl and chrysolite<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And chrysoprase and ruby and sardonyx.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>When the Portuguese first landed in East Africa
+the chief tribe with which they came in contact was
+the Makalanga in Mashonaland, ruled by the Monomotapa.
+But before their power waned they had
+seen that nation vanquished and scattered by the
+attacks of fiercer tribes from the north, particularly
+the Mazimba, in whose name there may lurk a trace
+of the Agizymba, a country to which, according to
+Ptolemy, the Romans penetrated. For the last four
+centuries native South Africa has been the theatre
+of a continuous <i>völkerwanderung</i>, immigrations from
+the north, and in consequence a general displacement,
+so that no tribe can claim an ancient possession
+of its territory. We may detect, apart
+from the Mashonas, three chief race families among
+the Bantus&mdash;the Ovampas and people of German
+South Africa; the Bechuanas and Basutos; and the
+great mixed race of which the Zulus and the Kaffirs
+of Eastern Cape Colony are the chief representatives.
+All the groups show a strong family likeness in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+customs, worship, and physical character. As a rule
+the men are tall and well-formed, and their features
+are more shapely than the ordinary negro of West
+Africa or the far interior. They have a knowledge
+of husbandry and some skill in metal-working; they
+have often shown remarkable courage in the field and
+a kind of rude discipline; and they dwell in a society
+which is rigidly, if crudely, organised. The Custom of
+the Ancients is the main rule in their lives, and such
+law as they possess owes its sanction to this authority.
+The family is the social unit; and families are combined
+into clans, and clans into tribes, with one paramount
+chief at the head, whose power in most instances
+is despotic, as becomes a military chief. In
+some of the tribes, notably the Bechuana-Basuto, we
+find rudiments of popular government, where the chief
+has to take the advice of the assembled people, as in
+the Basuto <i>pitso</i>, or, in a few cases, of a council of the
+chief indunas. The chief&rsquo;s authority as lawgiver is
+absolute, but his judgments are supposed to be only
+declaratory of ancient custom. Socially the tribes
+are polygamous, and sexual morality is low, though
+certain crimes are reprobated and severely punished.
+The prevailing religion is ancestor-worship, joined
+with a rude form of natural dæmonism. The ordinary
+Bantu is not an idolater like the Makalanga, but he
+walks in terror of unseen spirits which dwell in the
+woods and rivers,&mdash;the ghost of his father it may be,
+or some unattached devils. Ghost feasts are made at
+stated times on the graves of the dead; and if the
+ghost has been whimsical enough to enter the body of
+an animal, that animal must be jealously respected.
+Each tribe has its totem&mdash;the lion, or the antelope,
+or the crocodile&mdash;from which they derive their descent,
+one of the commonest features of all primitive societies.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+There seem traces of a vague belief in a superior deity,
+who makes rain and thunder and controls the itinerant
+bands of ghosts&mdash;a great ghost, who, if properly supplicated,
+may intercede with the smaller and more
+troublesome herd. But abstractions are essentially
+foreign to the Bantu mind, and his modest Pantheon
+is filled with the simplest of deities.</p>
+
+<p>No priesthood exists, but it is possible for a clever
+man to learn some of the tricks of disembodied spirits
+and frustrate them by his own skill. In this way a
+class of sorcerers arose, who dealt in big medicine and
+strong magic. They profess to make rain and receive
+communications from the unseen, to cure diseases and
+give increase to the flocks, to expound the past and
+foretell the future. This powerful class is jealous of
+amateurs, and does its best to remove inferior wizards;
+but they are always liable to be annihilated themselves
+by a powerful chief, who is more bloodthirsty
+than superstitious. Undoubtedly some of these
+sorcerers acquire a knowledge of certain natural
+secrets; they become skilled meteorologists, and seem
+to possess a crude knowledge of hypnotism. They are
+also physicians of considerable attainments, and certain
+native remedies, notably a distillation of herbs, which
+is used for dysentery in Swaziland, have a claim to a
+place in a civilised pharmacop&oelig;ia. This rough science
+is the only serious intellectual attainment of the
+Bantu, outside of warfare. They have a kind of
+music which is extremely doleful and monotonous;
+they have a rude art, chiefly employed in the decoration
+of their weapons; but they have no poetry
+worthy of the name; and their only literature is found
+in certain simple folk-tales, chiefly of animals, but in
+a few cases of human escapades and feats of sorcery.
+The lion is generally the butt of such stories, and the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+quick wit of the hare and the knavery of the jackal
+are held up to the admiration of the listeners.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
+
+<p>Such are the chief features of Bantu life, and so
+lived the natives of South Africa up to the early years
+of last century. But about that time a certain Dingiswayo,
+being in exile at Cape Town, saw a company
+of British soldiers at drill, and, being an intelligent
+man, acquired a new idea of the art of war. When he
+returned to his home and the chieftainship of the little
+Zulu tribe, the memory of the soldiers in shakos, who
+moved as one man, remained with him, and he began
+to experiment with his army. He died, and his lieutenant
+Tchaka succeeded to the command of a small
+but well-disciplined force. This Tchaka was one of
+those born leaders of men in battle who appear on
+the stage of history every century or so. He perfected
+the discipline of his army, armed it with short stabbing
+spears for close-quarter fighting, and then proceeded
+to use it as a wedge to split the large loose masses
+which surrounded him. It was a war of the eagle and
+the crows. Neighbouring tribes awoke one morning
+to find the enemy at their gates, and by the evening
+they had ceased to exist. A wild flight to the north
+began, and for years the wastes north and east of the
+Drakensberg were littered with flying remnants of
+broken clans. All the great deeds of savage warfare&mdash;the
+killing of the Suitors, the fight in the Great
+Hall of Worms, Cuchulain&rsquo;s doings in the war of the
+Bull of Cuailgne&mdash;pale before the barbaric splendours
+of Tchaka&rsquo;s slaughterings, the Zulus became the imperial
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+power of South-East Africa, and their monarch&rsquo;s
+authority was limited only by the length of his impis&rsquo;
+reach. By-and-by his career of storm ceases. We
+find him ruling as a severe and much-venerated king,
+arbitrary and bloodthirsty but comparatively honest;
+a huge man, with many large vices and a few glimmerings
+of virtue. He was succeeded by his brother,
+the monstrous Dingaan, who was soundly beaten by
+the Boers in one of the most heroic battles in history;
+he in turn gave way to his brother Panda, a figure of
+small note; and the dynasty ended with Cetewayo and
+the blood and terror of Isandhlwana and Ulundi.</p>
+
+<p>After Tchaka the man who looms largest in the
+tale of those wars is Mosilikatse, the founder of the
+Matabele. The Zulu conquests placed terrible autocrats
+on the throne, and the marshal who incurred the
+king&rsquo;s displeasure had to flee or perish. To this circumstance
+we owe the Angoni in Nyassaland and the
+empire of Lobengula. About 1817 Mosilikatse with
+his impi burst into what is now the Orange River
+Colony, driving before him the feeble Barolong and
+Bechuana tribes, and established his court at a place
+on the Crocodile River north of the Magaliesberg,
+where a pass still bears his name. He began a
+career of wholesale rapine and slaughter, till, as
+Fate would have it, he came in contact with the
+pioneers of the Great Trek. Some hideous massacres
+were the result, but he had to deal with an enemy
+against whom his race could never hope to stand.
+The Boers, under Uys and Potgieter, drove him from
+his kraal, impounded his ill-gotten cattle, and finally,
+in a great battle on the Marico River, defeated him so
+thoroughly that he fled north of the Limpopo and left
+the country for ever. From the little we know of
+him he was a cruel and treacherous chief, inferior in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+strength to Tchaka, as he was utterly inferior to
+Moshesh in statesmanship. But the men he led had
+the true Zulu fighting spirit, and in the Matabele,
+under his son Lobengula, we have learned something
+of the warriors of Mosilikatse.</p>
+
+<p>A throne which, as with the Zulus and their offshoots,
+had no strong religious sanction, must subsist
+either by continued success in battle or a studious
+statesmanship. Tchaka is an instance of the first;
+Moshesh, the founder of the Basuto power, is a signal
+example of the second. The Basutos were driven
+down from the north by the Zulu advance, and found
+shelter in the wild tangle of mountains which cradle
+the infant Orange and Caledon rivers. Moshesh, who
+had no hereditary claim to a throne, won his power
+by his own abilities, and on the mountain of Thaba
+Bosigo established his royal kraal. The name of the
+&ldquo;Chief of the Mountain&rdquo; is written larger even than
+Tchaka&rsquo;s over South African history, and to-day his
+people are the only tribe who have any substantive
+independence. Alone among native chiefs he showed
+the intellect of a trained statesman, and a tireless
+patience which is only too rare in the annals of statesmanship.
+The presence of French missionaries at his
+court gave him the means of instruction in European
+ways, and he was far too clever to have any prejudice
+against so startling a departure from the habits of his
+race. He watched the dissensions of the rival white
+peoples, and quietly and cautiously profited by their
+blunders. He made war against them as a tactical
+measure, and after an undoubted victory increased his
+power by making a diplomatic peace. He left his
+tribe riches and security, and the history of Basutoland
+since his day is one long commentary on the
+surprising talents of its founder. How far the credit
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+is his and how far it belongs to his advisers we cannot
+tell; but we can admire a character so liberal as to
+accept advice, and a mind so shrewd that it saw unerringly
+its own advantage. There is none of the
+wild glamour of conquest about him, but there is a more
+abiding reputation for a far more intricate
+work; for, like another statesman, he could make
+a small town a great city&mdash;and with the minimum
+of expense.</p>
+
+<p>With the death of Moshesh the history of South
+Africa becomes almost exclusively the history of its
+white masters. It is an old country, as old as time,
+the prey of many conquerors, but with it all a patient
+and mysterious land. Civilisations come and go, and
+after a millennium or two come others who speculate
+wildly on the relics of the old. In some future century
+(who knows?), when the Rand is covered with thick
+bush and once more the haunt of game, some enlightened
+sportsman, hunting in his shirt after the
+bush-veld manner, may clear the undergrowth from
+the workings of the Main Reef and write a chapter
+such as this on the doings of earlier adventurers.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a>
+An interesting sketch of the palæolithic remains in South Africa is
+contained in two essays appended to Dr Alfred Hillier&rsquo;s &lsquo;Raid and Reform&rsquo;
+(1898).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a>
+The chief authorities on this curious subject are Mr Bent&rsquo;s &lsquo;Ruined
+Cities of Mashonaland,&rsquo; Dr Schlichter&rsquo;s papers in the &lsquo;Geographical
+Journal,&rsquo; Professor Keane&rsquo;s &lsquo;Gold of Ophir,&rsquo; and Dr Carl Peters&rsquo; &lsquo;Eldorado
+of the Ancients.&rsquo; Mr Wilmot&rsquo;s &lsquo;Monomotapa&rsquo; contains an
+interesting collection of historical references from Ph&oelig;nician, Arabian,
+and Portuguese sources; and in &lsquo;The Ancient Ruins of Rhodesia,&rsquo; by
+Messrs Hall and Neal, there is a very complete description of the ruins
+examined up to date (1902), and a valuable digest of the various theories
+on the subject.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a>
+There is an account of Bantu life in Dr Theal&rsquo;s &lsquo;Portuguese in South
+Africa.&rsquo; The same author&rsquo;s &lsquo;Kaffir Folk-lore&rsquo; and M. Casalis&rsquo; &lsquo;Les Bassoutos&rsquo;
+contain much information on their customs and folk-lore; while
+Bishop Callaway&rsquo;s &lsquo;Nursery Tales of the Zulus,&rsquo; M. Jacottet&rsquo;s &lsquo;Contes
+Populaires des Bassoutos,&rsquo; and M. Junod&rsquo;s &lsquo;Chants et Contes des Baronga&rsquo;
+and &lsquo;Nouveaux Contes Ronga&rsquo; are interesting collections of folk-tales.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE GENTLEMEN-ADVENTURERS.</h4>
+
+<p>The world&rsquo;s changes, so philosophers have observed,
+spring from small origins, though their reason and
+their justification may be ample enough, and exercise
+the learned for a thousand years. A sailor&rsquo;s tale, a
+book in an old library, may set the adventurer off on
+his voyages, and presently empires arise, and his
+fatherland alters its history. The world moves to no
+measured tune; everywhere there are sudden breaks,
+paradoxes, high enterprises which end in smoke, and
+pedestrian beginnings which issue in the imperial
+purple. All things have their ground in theory, and
+by-and-by a dismal post-mortem science will discover
+impulses which the adventurer never dreamed of.
+Few lands, even the most remote, are without this
+variegated history, and the crudest commercial power
+is built up on the <i>débris</i> of romance. South Africa,
+which is to-day, and to most men, a parvenu country,
+founded on the Stock Exchange, has odd incidents in
+her pedigree. Eliminate all the prehistoric guesses,
+strike out the Dutch, and the Old World has still had
+its share in her fashioning. Europe may seem only
+yesterday to have finally sealed her conquest, but she
+has been trying her hand at it for five hundred years.
+And the result of the oldest struggle has been a
+curious story of failure&mdash;often heroic, seldom wise, but
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+always fascinating, as such stories must be. It is
+associated with one of the smallest, and to-day the
+least enterprising, of European peoples; and it has
+issued in Portugal&rsquo;s most notable over-sea possession.
+Every nation has its holy land of endeavour&mdash;England
+in India, France in Algiers, Russia in
+Turkestan. Such was South Africa to Portugal;
+much what Sicily was to the Athenians, the place
+linked with all her hopes and with her direst misfortunes.</p>
+
+<p>Happily the adventure was not without its
+chroniclers. The Dominican friar, dos Santos,<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> has
+sketched for us the empire at its zenith, and de
+Barros, the Portuguese Secretary for the Indies, has
+piously narrated its beginnings. But the matter-of-fact
+histories disguise the real daring of the exploit.
+The chivalry of Europe in its most characteristic form
+was carried 8000 miles from home to an unknown
+land; civilisation of a kind, a Christian church, a code
+of honour, the rudiments of law and commerce, and
+the amenities of life, were planted on a narrow malarial
+seaboard by men who had taken years in the voyage,
+and had scarcely a hope of return. It is said that a
+great part of courage lies in having done the thing
+before, but there was no such ingredient in the valour
+of those adventurers. Risking all on a dream, they
+set off on their ten-year excursions, holding an almost
+certain death as a fair stake in the game. The tenth
+who survived set themselves cheerfully to transform
+their discoveries into a national asset. They colonised
+as whole-heartedly, if not as wisely, as any nation
+in the world. And in spite of the narrowest and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+most pragmatic of cultures, they proved themselves
+singularly adaptable. The Portuguese gentlemen, for
+whom the Cancioneiros were sung, became Africans
+in everything but blood, adopting a new land under
+their old flag, and doing their best to Christianise and
+colonise it. It was not their fault that the unalterable
+laws of trade and the destinies of races shattered in
+time the fabric at which they had laboured.</p>
+
+<p>In 1445, the year in which Diniz Dias is reported to
+have rounded Cape Verd, the Portuguese were the
+most daring seamen in Europe. Dwelling on a promontory,
+they naturally turned their eyes southward
+and westward, when peace and a moderate wealth
+gave them leisure for fancies. Those were the days
+of the foreglow of the Renaissance. Constantinople
+had not yet fallen, but the spirit of inquiry was
+abroad, and a fresh wind had blown among scholastic
+cobwebs. The Church had her share in the revival.
+A belated missionary, or, as it may be, commercial,
+zeal stirred the ecclesiastical powers. Fresh lands
+might be won for the Cross, and fresh moneys to
+build new abbeys and endow new bishoprics. The
+merchants of Lisbon and Oporto saw gold in every
+traveller&rsquo;s tale, and gladly risked a bark on a promising
+undertaking. There lived, too, at the time a
+sagacious prince, Henry the Navigator, the son of
+João I. and Philippa of Lancaster, himself an amateur
+of colonisation, who set the fashion for courtiers and
+citizens. So the young Portuguese squire, trained in
+the pride of his caste, his mind nurtured on chivalrous
+tales, fired readily at the strange rumours, and found
+a peaceful life among his vineyards no satisfying
+career for a man. To him the white sea-wall of the
+harbour was the boundary of the unknown. Out in
+the west lay the Purple Islands of King Juba, the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+forgotten Atlantis, the lost Hesperides, and dim
+classical recollections from the monastery school gave
+authority to his fancies. There were but two careers
+for a gentleman, arms and adventure, and the latter
+was for the moment the true magnet. To him it
+might be given to find the Golden City, the Ophir of
+King Solomon, or to penetrate beyond the deserts to
+where Prester John<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> ruled his wild empire in the
+fear of God. And all the while in Europe men were
+wrangling over creeds and syllogisms, questioning the
+powers of the Church, grumbling over dogmas, dying
+for a few square miles of territory. What wonder if
+to high-bred, high-spirited youth Europe seemed all
+too narrow&mdash;especially to youth in that south-west
+corner cut off by the sierras from the world? What
+mattered desperate peril so long as it had daylight
+and honour in it? So with hope at his prow and
+a clear conscience the adventurer set out on his
+travels.</p>
+
+<p>The first object of Portuguese enterprise was Bilad
+Ghana, the modern Senegal, which they knew of
+from Arab geographers. The land route across the
+Sahara was closed to them, so they were compelled to
+reach it by sea. It was Henry&rsquo;s dream to make the
+country a Portuguese dependency, and Christianise
+it under the iron rule of the Order of the Knights
+of Jesus Christ,&mdash;one of those schemes in which the
+crusading spirit and a hunger for new territory are
+subtly blended in the common fashion of the Age of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+the Adventurers. It was currently believed that the
+Senegal River rose from a lake near the source of the
+Nile, and would thus enable the Portuguese to join
+hands with the Christian monarch of Abyssinia. A
+special indulgence was obtained from the Pope for all
+who fought under the banner of the Order of Christ.
+And so, blessed by the Church, a series of slave-raids
+began, which were slowly pushed farther south till
+Cape Verd was reached, and the great turn of the
+coast to the east began to puzzle the sea-captains.
+Henry died in 1460, having added, as he believed,
+a vast territory to the Portuguese Crown, called by
+the name of Guinea, which is Bilad Ghana corrupted.
+That the future interests of its discoverer might be
+properly cared for the new land was divided into
+parishes, whose chaplains were bound to say one
+weekly mass for the Iffante&rsquo;s soul. By the time of
+the death of Affonso V. in 1481 the Portuguese had
+passed the Niger Delta, discovered the island of
+Fernando Po, and reached a point two degrees south
+of the equator. In 1484 Diego Cam reached the
+mouth of the Congo, and next year set up a marble
+pillar at Cape Cross to mark his occupation. Another
+year and Bartolomeo Diaz touched at Angra Pequena,
+pushed round the Cape, keeping far out to sea, to
+Algoa Bay; and on returning discovered that Cabo
+Tormentoso which his king christened Cabo da
+Boa Esperanza, the first earnest of the hope of the
+new road to the Indies. Portugal had taken rank as
+the first of seafaring powers, and, in Politian&rsquo;s words,
+stood forth as &ldquo;the trustee of a second world, holding
+in the hollow of her hand a vast series of lands,
+ports, seas, and islands revealed by the industry of
+her sons and the enterprise of her kings.&rdquo; Politian
+asked that the great story might be written while the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+materials were yet fresh, but unfortunately Portugal
+was richer at that time in sea-captains than in men
+of letters.</p>
+
+<p>On July 8, 1497, Vasco da Gama, the greatest of
+the world&rsquo;s sailors, left Lisbon on the greatest of all
+voyages. The circumnavigation of Africa was imposed
+upon the Archemenid Sataspes as a &ldquo;penalty
+worse than death,&rdquo; but to those adventurers death
+itself was an inconsiderable accident. Five years
+before Columbus had made his first journey, an enterprise
+not to be named in the same breath as da
+Gama&rsquo;s. On Christmas day, having safely passed the
+Cape, he came to a land of green, tree-clad shores,
+which he piously christened Natal. He pushed on
+past the Limpopo and the Zambesi delta to Mozambique,
+where he found an Arab colony, and to Mombasa,
+where the chief street still bears his name. He
+reached Calicut safely on May 20, 1498, ten months
+and twelve days after leaving Lisbon; and two years
+later he returned home with one-third of the crew he
+had sailed with. The Grand Road was now defined;
+thenceforth it was a trade-route to which commerce
+naturally turned. No more romantic voyages were
+ever undertaken, for in those forlorn latitudes
+Christian and Muslim, East and West, met in war
+and peace, and creeds and ideas clashed in the
+strangest disorder. In the expedition of 1500 under
+Pedro Alvarez Cabral two men were set ashore at
+Melinda, north of Mozambique, to look for Prester
+John, and history is silent on the fate of the unfortunate
+gentlemen. In da Gama&rsquo;s second voyage
+Nilwa was captured and the Portuguese East African
+empire began. A fierce enthusiast was this same
+da Gama, for, meeting with a great ship of the
+Sultan of Egypt, filled with Muslim pilgrims, he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+looted it from stem to stern, and sent every pilgrim
+to Paradise.</p>
+
+<p>After da Gama came Affonso d&rsquo;Albuquerque, who
+seized Goa, and established his country&rsquo;s hold on the
+Malabar coast, and pushing on captured Malacca, the
+richest of the Portuguese trading stations. He swept
+all alien navies from the Eastern seas, and established
+on a sound basis of naval supremacy a great commercial
+empire. Nothing less than the conquest of
+Turkey would satisfy him. He dreamed of allying
+himself with Prester John, and establishing himself
+on the Upper Nile; and again of raiding Medina,
+carrying off Muhammad&rsquo;s coffin, and exchanging it
+for the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem. He captured
+Hormuz on the Persian Gulf, and with it the enormous
+trade between India and Asia Minor; and he was on
+the eve of leading an expedition against Aden, which
+he saw to be the key of the Red Sea, when he was
+struck down at Goa, and died, like the great seigneur
+he was, clothed in the robes of his knightly order.
+Against his expressed wish he was buried at Goa, for
+the Portuguese believed that, as long as the bones of
+their intrepid leader lay there, their Empire of the
+East would stand. So died the foremost of his
+countrymen, one who may rank with Olive as the
+greatest of Christian viceroys.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime the East African power had been fully
+established. Sofala and Mozambique, the chief cities
+of the coast, had fallen to the Portuguese, and their
+eyes turned to what they believed to be the fabulously
+rich hinterlands, where Solomon had won his gold and
+ivory, and Arab traders had for centuries found their
+hunting-ground. The Monomotapa, the chief or
+emperor of the Makalanga, whose Zimbabwe was
+situated somewhere in what we now know as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+Mashonaland, took the place of Prester John in their
+imagination. They pushed up the Zambesi, founding
+trading stations on the way, which still survive. They
+found Ophir in every Bantu name, and began that long
+series of meaningless wars of conquest which in the
+end shattered their dream of empire. Gold-seeking
+has never been an enterprise blessed of Heaven; and
+the Portuguese were more unlucky than most adventurers.
+They found themselves involved in desperate
+wars; fever and poison carried off their leaders; and
+the grandees, like Barreto and Homem, who in
+cuirasses and velvets held indabas with Makalanga
+chiefs, got little reward for their diplomacy. Soon
+the horizon narrowed, boundaries were defined, and
+the colonist sat down in the coast towns to make a
+living by legitimate trade.</p>
+
+<p>The chief commercial importance of South-East
+Africa to the Portuguese was as a port of call on the
+great trade-route to the Indies. The skins, ivory,
+and gold, which the country produced, could never
+vie with the organised exports of Goa and Calicut. So
+Mozambique and Sofala became rather depots than
+supply-grounds, at which the great ships anchored
+and refitted; points of vantage, too, in the endless
+bickerings with Arab traders. There was a modest
+commerce with the interior, with Tete as the chief
+depot, and Masapa, Luanze, and Bukoto as the up-country
+stations. Each inland Portuguese trader was
+also a diplomat. Through him the presents passed
+from the Portuguese king to the savage &ldquo;emperors,&rdquo;
+and, situated as he might be at Masapa, on the very
+edge of the mountain Fura and the forbidden Makalanga
+country, his duties were often most delicate and
+hazardous. The trade as a whole was neither productive
+nor well managed. The whole empire was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+undermanned. Portugal was colonising Brazil and
+West Africa at the time she was sending out her
+adventurers to the East, and the little kingdom in
+Europe could not long endure the strain. The sons
+she sent forth rarely returned; and the estates at
+home fell out of cultivation for lack of men. Meantime
+stronger and more fortunate races were appearing
+in the Eastern waters. The Englishmen Newbery,
+Candish, and Raymond began the rivalry, and the
+formidable Dutch followed next, with their northern
+vigour and commercial aptitudes. In 1595 the first
+of Linschoten&rsquo;s books was published, and opened up
+a new world for Dutch enterprise. The Dutch East
+India Company soon wrested from Portugal her
+Indian possessions, and in a little her East African
+ports were mere isolated stations, much harassed
+by the Netherland fleets, and the Grand Road had
+become a thing of the past.</p>
+
+<p>But, as commerce declined, a new epoch in the
+Portuguese history began. The disappearance of
+trade was followed by the advent of one of the
+most heroic missionary brotherhoods in history. The
+Jesuit Gonsalvo de Silveira was the pioneer, and
+a year after he landed in Africa he was murdered
+by the Makalanga chief. Some fifty years later the
+Dominicans joined the Jesuits, and till the beginning
+of the eighteenth century laboured at their quixotic
+task. Now and then a chief&rsquo;s son was baptised and
+attained to some degree of civilisation, but the mass
+of the people, living among fierce tribal wars, cared
+little for curious tales of peace. There was no ostentation
+with those Bishops of This or That <i>in partibus
+infidelium</i>. No churches remain to tell of their work.
+They lived simply in huts, and died a thousand miles
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+away from their kin, so that their very names are
+forgotten. In our own day travellers in the Zambesi
+valley have come to kraals where the people called
+themselves Christians, and showed a few perverted
+rites in evidence, the one relic of those forgotten
+heroes. A few incidents, however, have remained
+in men&rsquo;s minds. Luiz do Espirito Santa, a prior of
+Mozambique, on being taken into the presence of the
+Monomotapa and ordered to make obeisance, stiffened
+his back, and replied that he did such homage to God
+alone; for which noble saying he was duly murdered.
+The Shining Cross, which Constantine saw, appeared
+also to the friar Manoel Sardinha when he led his forces
+against the Makalanga. In 1652 the Monomotapa
+Manuza was received into the Church, an event which
+was the occasion for a great thanksgiving service at
+Lisbon, at which the king João IV. attended in state.
+His son, Miguel, entered the Dominican order, was
+given the diploma of Master of Theology, and died
+a vicar of the convent of Santa Barbara in Goa.
+This barbarian Charles V., the greatest South African
+chief of his time, may well be remembered among
+the few mortals who have voluntarily renounced a
+crown.</p>
+
+<p>And so the empire, having shipwrecked on a dream
+of gold and a land where men could not live,<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> dwindled
+down to isolated forts and stations, and the strenuous
+creed of the pioneers was softened into the bastard
+contentment of the disheartened. Miserably and corruptly
+governed, forgotten by Europe, they forgot
+Europe in turn, and a strange somnolent life began of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+half-barbaric, wholly oriental seigneurs, ruling as petty
+monarchs over natives from whom they were not
+wholly distinct.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> Instead of holding the outposts of
+European culture, they sank themselves into the ways
+of the soil which their forefathers had conquered.
+Round Tete and Inhambane and Sofala there grew up
+great country estates, held on a kind of feudal tenure,
+where the slack-mouthed grandee idled away his days.
+Set among acres of orchards and gardens, those dwellings
+were often noble and sumptuous. Thither came
+belated travellers, gold-seekers, shipwrecked seamen,
+wandering friars, men of every nationality and trade,
+and in the prazo of a de Mattos or a de Mira found
+something better than the mealie-pap they had been
+living on in native kraals. Sitting on soft couches,
+drinking good Madeira, and looking at a copy of
+a Murillo or a Velasquez on the walls, they may well
+have extolled those oases in the desert. The grandee
+had his harem, like any Arab sheikh; he dispensed
+death cruelly and casually among his subjects; but as
+a rule he seems to have had the virtue of hospitality,
+and welcomed gladly any traveller with tales of the
+forgotten world. Fierce Bantu wars have left few
+traces of those pleasant demesnes; but to the new-comer
+the land where they once existed has still a quaint
+air of decadent civilisation. Coming down from the
+high tableland of the interior, which is the most
+strenuous land on earth, through the mountain glens
+which, but for vegetation, might be Norway, one
+enters a country of bush and full muddy rivers, a
+country of dull lifeless green and a pestilent climate.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+But as one draws nearer the coast, where glimpses of
+gardens appear and white-walled estancias, and rivers
+spread into lagoons with spits of yellow sand and Arab
+boatmen, and, last of all, the pale blue Indian Ocean
+stretches its sleepy leagues to the horizon, there comes
+a new feeling into the scene, as of something old, not
+new, decaying rather than undeveloped, which, joined
+with the moist heat, makes the place</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i18">&ldquo;A land<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In which it seemèd always afternoon,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All round the coast the languid air did swoon,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Breathing like one that hath a weary dream.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The tale of this empire, crude and melancholy as it
+is, provides an instructive commentary on current
+theories of colonisation. From Tyre and Sidon down
+to the last Teutonic performance, there is surely sufficient
+basis to generalise on; but no two theorists are
+agreed upon the laws which govern those racial adventures.
+The only approach to a dogma is the theory
+that to colonise is to decentralise&mdash;that before a vigorous
+life can begin over-sea the runners must be cut
+which bind the colony to the homeland. France fails,
+we say, because a Frenchman away from home cannot
+keep his mind off the boulevards; he is for ever an
+exile, not a settler. Britain succeeds because her sons
+find a land of their adoption. But the converse is
+equally important, though too rare in its application
+to be often remembered. No race can colonise which
+cannot decentralise its energy; but equally no race
+can colonise which can wholly decentralise its sentiment
+and memory. Portugal failed for this reason
+chiefly, that the Portuguese forgot Portugal. Few
+peoples have been so adaptable. The white man&rsquo;s
+pride died in their hearts. They were ready to mix
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+with natives on equal terms.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> Now concubinage is
+bad, but legitimate marriage with half-castes is infinitely
+worse for the <em>morale</em> of a people. And since
+Nature to the end of time has a care of races but
+not of hybrids, this tolerant, foolish, unstable folk
+dropped out of the battle-line of life, and sank from
+conquerors to resident aliens, while their country
+passed from an empire to a vague seaboard. &ldquo;A
+people scattered by their wars and affairs over the
+whole earth, and home-sick to a man,&rdquo; wrote Emerson
+of the English, and it is the trait of the true colonist.
+It is as important to remember &ldquo;sweet Argos&rdquo; as it is
+to avoid a womanish <i>heimweh</i>. For a colony is a sapling,
+bound by the law of nature to follow the development
+of the parent tree. A parcel of Englishmen
+on the Australian coast have no significance without
+England at their back, to give them a tradition of
+manners and government, to be their recruiting-ground,
+to hold out at once a memory of home and an ideal of
+polity. Wars of separation may come, but a colony is
+still a colony: it may have a different colour on the
+map, but its moral complexion is the same; politically
+it may be a rival, spiritually it remains a daughter.</p>
+
+<p>The country, too, was wretchedly governed. The
+Portuguese viceroy, often some impoverished noble,
+was in the same position as the Roman proconsul, and
+had to restore his fortunes at the expense of the provincials.
+Local administration was farmed out to local
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+magnates, another part of the crazy decentralisation
+which led to catastrophe. There is more in bad government
+than hardship for the private citizen. It means
+the weakening of the intellectual and moral nerve of
+the race which tolerates it. Sound government is not,
+as revolutionary doctrinaires used to think, the outcome
+of the grace of God and a flawless code of abstractions.
+It means a perpetual effort, a keen sense of
+reality, a constant facing and adjusting of problems.
+And it is one of the laws of life that this high faculty
+is inconsistent with extreme luxury and ease. A great
+governor may be one-fourth voluptuary, but he must
+be three-parts politician. &ldquo;Je n&rsquo;aime pas beaucoup
+les femmes,&rdquo; was one of Napoleon&rsquo;s self-criticisms,
+&ldquo;ni le jeu&mdash;enfin rien; je suis tout à fait un être
+politique.&rdquo; The thin strain of old-world tradition
+was useless in men who were sheikhs, adventurers,
+grandees, but never statesmen.</p>
+
+<p>But the ultimate source of weakness was economic.
+The settlements were unproductive in any real sense.
+The empire was a chain of forts and depots, and on no
+side was the ruling power organically connected with
+the soil. A colony should be built up of farmers and
+miners and manufacturers, having for its basis the
+productive energy of the land. To exploit is not to
+colonise, and on this side there is the most urgent need
+for decentralisation. The Portuguese lost their European
+culture, but they remained adventurers and
+aliens. Their traders bargained for produce, but they
+never went to the root of the matter and organised
+production. They had no ranches or plantations, only
+their trading-booths. Like the Carthaginians, they
+carried their commerce to the ends of the earth, and
+left the ends of the earth radically unaffected by their
+presence. People repeat glibly that trade follows the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+flag, and that commerce is the basis of empire. And
+in a sense it is true, for an empire without commercial
+inter-relations and a solid basis of material prosperity
+is a house built on the sand. But if the maxim be
+taken in the sense that commerce is in itself a sufficient
+imperial bond, it is the most fatal of heresies. The
+Dutch, in their heyday, had an empire chiefly of forts
+and factories; and what part has the Dutch empire
+played in the destinies of mankind? No race or kingdom
+can endure which is not rooted in the soil, drawing
+sustenance from natural forces, increasing by tillage
+and forestry, pasturage and mining and manufacture,
+the aggregate of the world&rsquo;s production. And the
+need is as much moral as economic. The trader pure
+and simple&mdash;Tyrian, Greek, Venetian, Dutch, or
+Portuguese&mdash;is too cosmopolitan and adventitious to be
+the staple of a strong race. He has not the common
+local affections; he is not knit close enough to nature
+in his toil. To wrest a living from the avarice of the
+earth is to form character with the salt and iron of
+power in it. India, it is true, is a partial exception;
+but India is a unique case of a long-settled subject
+people ruled wisely by a race which has sufficient
+breadth and vitality in its culture to spare time for the
+experiment. It is to colonies, which must always form
+the major part of an empire, that the maxim applies;
+for the former is a native power under tutelage, while
+the latter is the expansion of the parent country beyond
+the seas. And this expansion must be more than commercial.
+The colony must be founded in the soil, its
+people with each generation becoming more indigenous,
+and its wealth based on its own toil and enterprise;
+otherwise it is but such a chain of factories as the
+Portuguese established, which the proverbial whiff of
+grape-shot may scatter to-morrow.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a>
+There is an English abbreviation of dos Santos in Pinkerton&rsquo;s &lsquo;General
+Collection of Voyages and Travels.&rsquo; The original work was printed at
+Evora in 1609.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a>
+The Portuguese geographers divided Central Africa into Angola in
+the west, the kingdom of Prester John in the north (Abyssinia), and the
+empire of Monomotapa (Mashonaland) in the south. The real Prester
+John was a Nestorian Christian in Central Asia, whose khanate was
+destroyed by Genghis Khan about the end of the twelfth century; but
+the name became a generic one for any supposed Christian monarch in
+unknown countries.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a>
+Purchas wrote, &ldquo;Barreto was discomfited not by the Negro but by
+the Ayre, the malignity whereof is the same sauce of all their golden
+countries in Africa.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a>
+One missionary wrote, &ldquo;They have already lost the knowledge of
+Christians and thrown away the obligations of Faith&rdquo; (Wilmot, &lsquo;Monomotapa,&rsquo;
+p. 215).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a>
+Among the Baronga, the Bantu tribe who live around Delagoa Bay,
+there are some ancient folk-tales, derived from Portuguese sources, in
+which the heroes have Portuguese names, such as João, Boniface,
+Antonio. One tale about the king&rsquo;s daughter, who was saved from
+witchcraft by the courage of a young adventurer called João, is a form of
+the story of Jack and the ugly Princess, which appears throughout
+European folk-lore. Cf. M. Junod&rsquo;s &lsquo;Chants et Contes des Baronga,&rsquo;
+pp. 274-322.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE GREAT TREK.</h4>
+
+<p>Every race has its Marathon into which the historian
+does not inquire too closely who has a reverence for
+holy places and a fear of sacrilege. It may be a battle
+or a crusade, a creed, or perhaps only a poem, but whatever
+it is, it is part and parcel of the national life, and
+it is impossible to reach the naked truth through the
+rose-coloured mists of pious tradition. A Sempach or
+a Bannockburn cannot be explained by a bare technical
+history. The spirit of a nation was in arms, the
+national spirit was the conqueror, and the combatants
+appear more than mere flesh and blood, walking
+&ldquo;larger than human&rdquo; on the hills of story. This
+phenomenon has merits which it is hard to exaggerate.
+It is the basis for the rhetorical self-confidence which
+is essential to a strong race. It is a fountain from
+which generous youth can draw inspiration, an old
+watchword to call the inert to battle. If the race has
+a literature, it helps to determine its character; if the
+race has none, it provides a basis for fireside tales.
+The feeblest Greek at the court of Artaxerxes must
+have now and then straightened himself when he
+remembered Salamis. Without such a retrospect a
+people will live in a crude present, and, having no
+buttress from the past, will fare badly from the rough
+winds of life.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+To the Boer the Great Trek is the unrecorded but
+ever-remembered Odyssey of his people. He has a
+long memory, perhaps because of his very slowness
+and meagreness of fancy. His life was so monotonous
+that the tale of how his fathers first came into the
+land inspired him by its unlikeness to his own somnolent
+traditions. Besides, he had a Scriptural parallel.
+The persecuted children of Israel, in spite of the opposition
+of Pharaoh, had fled across the desert from
+Egypt and found a Promised Land. The Boer sense
+of analogy is extremely vivid and extremely inexact.
+Here he saw a perfect precedent. A God-fearing
+people, leaving their homes doubtless at the call of the
+Most High, had fled into the wilds of Amalek and
+Edom, conquered and dispossessed the Canaanites, and
+occupied a land which, if not flowing with milk and
+honey, was at least well grassed and plentifully
+watered. How keen the sense of Scriptural example
+was, and how constantly present to the Boer mind
+was the thought that he was following in the footsteps
+of Israel, is shown by one curious story. The
+voortrekkers, pushing out from Pretoria, struck a
+stream which flowed due north, the first large north-running
+water they had met. Moreover, it was liable
+to droughts and floods recurring at fixed seasons.
+What could it be but the great river of Egypt? So
+with immense pious satisfaction they recognised it
+as the Nile, and the Nyl it remains to this day.</p>
+
+<p>The thought of a national exodus comes easily to
+the Aryan mind,&mdash;an inheritance from primeval Asian
+wanderings. And in itself it is something peculiarly
+bold and romantic, requiring a renunciation of old ties
+and sentiments impossible to an over-domesticated
+race. It requires courage of a high order and a confident
+faith in destiny. Perhaps the courage needed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+in the case of the Great Trek was less than in most
+similar undertakings, because of the cheering Scriptural
+precedent and the lack of that imagination which
+can vividly forecast the future. The past history of
+the Boer, too, prepared him for desperate enterprises.
+Made up originally of doubtful adventurers from Holland,
+hardihood grew up in their blood as they pushed
+northwards from the seacoast. The people of the
+littoral might be, as Lady Anne Barnard found them,
+sluggish and spiritless; but the farmers of Colesberg
+and Graaff-Reinet were in the nature of things a different
+breed. The true Dutch blood does not readily
+produce an adventurer, but it was leavened and sublimated
+by a French Huguenot strain, scions of good
+families exiled for the most heroic of causes. The
+coarse strong Dutch stock swallowed them up; the language
+disappeared, the Colberts became Grobelaars, the
+Villons Viljoens, the Pinards Pienaars; but something
+remained of <i>élan</i> and spiritual exaltation. Harassed
+from the north by Griqua and Hottentot bandits, and
+from the east by Kaffir incursions, they became a hardy
+border race, keeping their own by dint of a strong
+arm. The quiet of the great sun-washed spaces entered
+into their souls. They grew taciturn, ungraceful, profoundly
+attached to certain sombre dogmas, impatient
+of argument or restraint, bad citizens for any modern
+State, but not without a gnarled magnificence of their
+own. They were out of line with the whole world,
+far nearer in kinship to an Old Testament patriarch
+than to the townsfolk with whom they shared the
+country. All angles and corners, they presented an
+admirable front to savage nature; but they were
+hard to dovetail into a complex modern society.
+They would have made good Ironsides, and would
+have formed a stubborn left wing at Armageddon,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+but they did ill with franchises and taxes and
+paternal legislation.</p>
+
+<p>I will take two savage tales from their history to
+show what manner of men they were in extremity.
+A certain Frederick Bezuidenhout, a farmer in the
+Bruintje Hoogte, and by all accounts a dabbler in
+less reputable trades, was summoned on some charge
+before the landdrost of the district, and declined to
+appear. A warrant was issued for his apprehension,
+and a party of soldiers sent out to enforce it, whereupon
+Bezuidenhout took refuge in a cave, and was shot dead
+in its defence. The fiery cross went round among his
+relatives; overtures, which were refused, were made
+to the Kaffir chiefs, and Jan Bezuidenhout, the brother
+of the dead man, swore to fealty a band of as pretty
+outlaws as ever dwelt on a border. The insurrection
+failed; thirty-nine of the insurgents were captured,
+and five were hanged, and Jan Bezuidenhout himself
+was shot in the Kaffir country by an advance party of
+the pursuit. Such is the too famous story of Slachter&rsquo;s
+Nek. The tale of Conrad de Buys<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> and his doings is
+wilder but more obscure. A man of great physical
+strength and the worst character, he was the leader of
+the sterner desperadoes on the Kaffir border. Through
+living much in native kraals he had become little
+better than a savage. He was mixed up in Van
+Jaarsveld&rsquo;s insurrection, and by-and-by his private
+crimes exceeded his political by so much that he was
+compelled to flee into the northern wilds. This first
+of the voortrekkers is next heard of on the banks of
+the Limpopo, living in pure barbarism, with a harem
+of Kaffir wives and an immense prestige among his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+neighbours. The emigrant party under Potgieter,
+on their return from Delagoa Bay, found somewhere
+in the Lydenburg hills two half-breeds who
+called this ruffian father and acted as interpreters.
+Conrad peopled the Transvaal with his
+children, whom he seems to have ruled in a patriarchal
+fashion, forming a real Buys clan, who still hang
+together at Marah, in Zoutpansberg. In the Pietersburg
+Burgher camp during the war there was a Buys
+location, who strenuously urged their claim to be considered
+a white people and burghers of the republic.</p>
+
+<p>Such was one element in the race of border farmers&mdash;a
+substratum of desperate lawlessness. But there
+were other elements, many of them noble and worthy.
+Their morals were less bad than peculiar; their lawlessness
+rather an inability to understand restrictions
+than an impulse to disorder. They had their own
+staunch loyalties, their own strict code of honour.
+They had the self-confidence of a people whose
+dogmatic foundations are unshaken, and who are in
+habitual intercourse with an inferior race. In a rude
+way they were kindly and hospitable. They had a
+courage so unwavering that it may be called an
+instinct, and the bodily strength which comes from
+bare living and constant exertion. &ldquo;Simple&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;pastoral&rdquo; used to be words of praise. During the
+late war they became a sneer; but it is well to
+recognise that while they may comprise the gravest
+faults they must denote a few sterling virtues.</p>
+
+<p>When Pieter Retief left Graaff-Reinet in 1837, he
+issued an ingenious proclamation which contains his
+justification of the Great Trek. He complains of the
+unnecessary hardships attending the emancipation of
+the slaves, the insecurity of life and property caused
+by the absence of proper vagrancy laws, and the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+disaster certain to attend Lord Glenelg&rsquo;s reversal of
+British policy on the Kaffir border. Retief was a
+man of high and conscientious character, and his
+profession of faith is valuable as showing the view of
+current politics held by the better class of the voortrekkers.
+They did not defend slavery&mdash;Retief expressly
+repudiates it; but they objected to the method
+of its abolition, and the lack of precautions for future
+public safety which the event demanded. Lord Glenelg&rsquo;s
+withdrawal from the eastern border to the
+boundary of the Keiskama and Tyumie rivers, as
+fixed by Lord Charles Somerset in 1819, appeared to
+them a flagrant piece of weakness which sooner or
+later must make life on that border impossible. They
+saw no hope of redress from the imperial Government,
+which seemed to be dominated by philanthropic
+hysteria. It is a grave indictment, and worth examination.
+The slavery question stands in the foreground.
+The ocean slave-trade was suppressed in
+1807, and the English abolitionists had leisure to turn
+their minds to South Africa. The first progressive
+enactment came in 1816, when the registration of
+slaves and slave-births was made compulsory in
+every district. In 1823 a series of laws were passed
+restricting slave labour on the Sabbath, giving
+slaves the right of owning property, and limiting
+the punishments to which they were liable. In
+1826 officials were appointed in country districts to
+watch over slave interests, and see that the protective
+enactments were carried out. The famous Fiftieth
+Ordinance of 1828 gave the Hottentots the same legal
+rights as the white colonists. Meanwhile for years a
+great missionary agitation for total abolition had been
+going on, which was powerfully supported by the
+Whig party in England. The Dutch saw clearly the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+trend of events, and, in what is known as the &ldquo;Graaff-Reinet
+proposals,&rdquo; attempted to procure gradually the
+emancipation which they realised was bound to come.
+They proposed, unanimously, that after a date to be
+fixed by Government all female children should be
+free at birth, and, by a majority, that all male children
+born after the same date should also be free. I cannot
+find in these proposals the insidious attempt to defeat
+the movement which some writers have discerned:
+they seem to me to be as fair and reasonable an offer
+as we could expect a slave-holding class to make.
+But the British attitude is also perfectly clear. Slave-holding
+had been condemned as a crime by the national
+conscience, and there could be no temporising with
+the evil thing. Here, again, a certain kind of education
+was necessary to appreciate the point of view.
+The farmers of Graaff-Reinet had not listened to the
+harangues of Wilberforce and Fowell Buxton; Zion
+Chapel and its all-pervading atmosphere of mild
+brotherly love were not within the compass of their
+experience. England was right, as she generally is in
+policies which are inspired by a profound popular conviction;
+but she could hardly expect men of a very
+different training to fall in readily with her views. In
+any case the working out of the policy was attended
+by many blunders. The Emancipation Act took effect
+in Cape Colony from the 1st of December 1834.
+£1,200,000 seems a rather inadequate compensation
+for 35,000 slaves, and as each claim had to be presented
+before commissioners in London, the farmer
+had perforce to employ an agent, who bought up his
+claims at a discount of anything from 18 to 30 per
+cent.</p>
+
+<p>The losses from emancipation were chiefly felt in
+the rich agricultural districts of the colony, such as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+Stellenbosch, Ceres, and Worcester; the border farmers
+were not a large slave-owning class, and the lack
+of cheap labour did not trouble them. But emancipation
+meant a general dislocation of credit all over the
+country. A man who in 1833 was counted a rich
+man was comparatively poor in 1835, and this <i>peripeteia</i>
+had a bad effect on the whole farming class.
+It was rather the spirit of the Act which the Boers
+of Graaff-Reinet complained of,&mdash;the theory, to them
+ridiculous, that the black man could have legal rights
+comparable with the white, and the sense of insecurity
+which dwellers under such a <i>régime</i> must feel. The
+average Boer was an arbitrary but not an unkind slave-master;
+he regarded his slaves as part of his <i>familia</i>,
+an enclosure to which the common law should not penetrate.
+To be limited by statute in the use of what
+he considered his chattels, to find hundreds of officious
+gentlemen ready to take the part of the chattels on
+any occasion against him, were pills too bitter to
+swallow. Emancipation produced vagrants, and he
+asked for a stringent vagrancy law which his landrosts
+could administer. England, refusing naturally
+to take away with one hand what she had given with
+the other, declined to expose the emancipated slave to
+the arbitrariness of local tribunals. Well, argued the
+farmers, our slaves, being free, have become rogues
+and vagabonds; they may plunder us at their pleasure
+and England will take their part: it is time for us to
+seek easier latitudes.</p>
+
+<p>But the chief factor in Dutch dissatisfaction was
+undoubtedly Lord Glenelg&rsquo;s limitation of the eastern
+border line. There is something to be said for the
+view of that discredited, and, to tell the truth, not
+very wise statesman. The Boer was a bad neighbour
+for a Kaffir people. He was always encroaching,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+spurred on by that nomadic something in his blood&mdash;a
+true Campbell of Breadalbane, who built his house
+on the limits of his estate that he might &ldquo;brise yont.&rdquo;
+A buffer state was apt to become very soon a Boer
+territory. Better to try and establish a strong Kaffir
+people, who might attain to some semblance of national
+life, and under the maternal eye of Britain become useful
+and progressive citizens. So reasoned Lord Glenelg and
+his advisers, missionary and official. Unfortunately
+facts were against him, the chimera of a Kaffir nation
+was soon dispelled, and ten years later Sir Harry Smith,
+a governor who did not suffer from illusions, made the
+eastern province a Kaffir reserve under a British
+commissioner. The frontier Boer, however, was not
+in a position to share any sentiment about a Kaffir
+nation. He saw his cattle looted, his family compelled
+to leave their newly acquired farm, and a long prospect
+of Kaffir raids where the presumption of guilt
+would always be held to lie against his own worthy
+self. Above all things he saw a barred door. No
+more &ldquo;brising yont&rdquo; for him on the eastern border.
+Expansion, space, were as the breath of his nostrils,
+and if he could not have them in the old colony he
+would seek them in the untravelled northern wilds.</p>
+
+<p>There were thus certain well-defined reasons for the
+Great Trek in contemporary politics which, combined
+with distorted memories like Slachter&rsquo;s Nek, made
+up in Boer eyes a very complete indictment against
+Pharaoh and his counsellors. But the real reason lay
+in his blood. Had the British Government been all
+that he could desire, he would still have gone. He
+was a wanderer from his birth, and trekking, even for
+great distances, was an incident of his common life.
+A pastoral people have few vested interests in land.
+There are no ancient homesteads to leave, or carefully-tended
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+gardens or rich corn-lands. Their wealth is
+in their herds, which can be driven at will to other
+pastures. The Boer rarely built much of a farm, and
+he never fenced. A cottage, a small vegetable-yard,
+and a stable made up the homestead on even large
+farms on the border. There was nothing to leave
+when he had gathered his horned cattle into a mob,
+yoked his best team to his waggon, and stowed his
+rude furniture inside. With his rifle slung on his
+shoulder, he was as free to take the road as any
+gipsy. He was leaving the country of the alien,
+where mad fancies held sway and unjust laws and
+taxes oppressed him. He was bound for the far
+lands of travellers&rsquo; tales, the country of rich grass
+and endless game, where he could live as he pleased
+and preserve the fashions of his fathers unchanged. He
+would meet with fierce tribes, but his elephant-gun,
+as he knew from experience, was a match for many
+assegais. There was much heroism in the Great Trek,
+but there was also for the young and hale an exhilarating
+element of sport. To them it was a new,
+strange, and audacious adventure. No predikant
+accompanied the emigrants. The Kirk did not see
+the Scriptural parallel, and to a man preferred the
+treasure in Egypt to the doubtful fortunes of Israel.</p>
+
+<p>The first party consisted of about thirty waggons,
+under the leadership of Louis Trichard and Jan van
+Rensburg. They travelled slowly, the men hunting
+along the route, and outspanned for days, and even
+weeks, at pleasant watering-places. The main object
+of those pioneers was to ascertain the road to Delagoa
+Bay; so they did not seek land for settlement, but
+pushed on till they came to Piet Potgieter&rsquo;s Rust, a
+hundred miles or so north of Pretoria, which they
+thought to be about the proper latitude. Here the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+party divided. Van Rensburg and his men went due
+east into the wild Lydenburg country on their way to
+the coast, and were never heard of again. Trichard
+waited a little, and then slowly groped his way
+through the Drakensberg to Portuguese territory.
+The band suffered terribly from fever; their herds
+were annihilated by the tsetse fly, of which they now
+heard for the first time; but in the end about twenty-six
+survivors struggled down to the bay and took
+ship for Natal. So ended the adventure of the path-finders.
+The next expedition was led by the famous
+Andries Potgieter, and came from the Tarka and
+Colesberg districts. The little Paulus Kruger, a boy
+of ten, travelled with the waggons to the country
+which he was to rule for long. Potgieter settled first
+in the neighbourhood of Thaba &rsquo;Nchu on the Basuto
+border, and bought a large tract of land from a
+Bataung chief. Farms were marked out, and a few
+emigrants remained, but the majority pushed on to
+the north and east. Some crossed the Vaal, and
+finding a full clear stream coming down from the
+north, christened it the Mooi or Fair River; and
+here in after-days, faithful to their first impression,
+they planted the old capital of the Transvaal. Potgieter
+with a small band set off on the search for
+Delagoa Bay, but he seems to have lost himself in
+the mountains between Lydenburg and Zoutpansberg.
+On his return he found that Mosilikatse&rsquo;s warriors had
+at last given notice of their presence, and had massacred
+a number of small outlying settlements. So
+began one of the sternest struggles in South African
+history.</p>
+
+<p>Potgieter gathered all the survivors into a great
+laager at a place called Vechtkop, between the
+Rhenoster and Wilge rivers. The precaution was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+taken none too soon, for one morning a few days
+later a huge native army appeared, led by the chief
+induna of Mosilikatse. The odds, so far as can be
+gathered, were about a hundred to one, but the little
+band was undaunted, and Sarel Celliers, a true Cromwellian
+devotee of the Bible and the sword, called his
+men to prayer. Then forty farmers rode out from the
+laager, galloped within range, spread out and fired a
+volley, riding back swiftly to reload. They did good
+execution, but forty men, however bold, cannot disperse
+5000, and in a little the Matabele were round
+the laager, and the siege began. The defence was so
+vigorous that after heavy losses the enemy withdrew,
+driving with them the little stock which formed the
+sole wealth of the emigrants.</p>
+
+<p>The glove had been thrown down and there could be
+no retreat. Midian must be destroyed root and branch
+before Israel could possess the land. After a short rest
+Potgieter and Gerrit Maritz began the war of reprisals.
+With a commando of over 100 men and a
+few Griqua followers, they forded the Vaal, crossed
+the Magaliesberg, and arrived at Mosilikatse&rsquo;s chief
+kraal at Mosega. The farmers&rsquo; victory was complete.
+Over 400 of the Matabele were slain, several thousand
+head of cattle secured, and the kraal given to the
+flames. Potgieter returned to found the little town
+of Winburg in memory of his victory, and, with the
+assistance of Pieter Retief, to frame a constitution for
+the nascent state. But Mosilikatse still remained.
+He had not been present at the <i>debâcle</i> of Mosega,
+and while he remained on the frontier there was no
+security for life and property. New recruits had
+come up from the south, including the redoubtable
+family of Uys, the horses were in good condition, all
+had had a breathing-space; so a new and more formidable
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+expedition started in search of the enemy.
+They found him on the Marico, and for nine days
+fought with him on the old plan of a charge, a volley,
+and a retreat. Then one morning there was no enemy
+to fight; a cloud of dust to the north showed the line
+of his flight; Mosilikatse had retired across the Limpopo.
+Whereupon the emigrants proclaimed the whole
+of the late Matabele territory&mdash;the Transvaal, the
+Orange River Colony, and a portion of Bechuanaland&mdash;as
+theirs by the right of conquest.</p>
+
+<p>So runs the tale of the Great Trek,&mdash;rather an Iliad
+than an Odyssey, perhaps, and a very bloodthirsty
+Iliad, too. To most men it must seem a noble and
+spirited story. Whatever the justice of the emigrants&rsquo;
+grievances, they conducted themselves well in their
+self-imposed exile. Potgieter and his men were indeed
+rather exceptional specimens of their race, and they
+were strung to the highest pitch by Christian faith
+and the unchristian passion of revenge. They relapsed,
+when all was over, to a somewhat ordinary type of
+farmer, which seems to bear out the general conception
+of the Boer character&mdash;that, while it is capable
+of high deeds, it is powerful by sudden effort rather
+than by sustained and strenuous toil. The experiment
+which began so well should have ended in something
+better than two bourgeois republics. There are some
+who see in the tale nothing more than an unwarranted
+invasion of native territory, and a cruel
+massacre of a brave race. No view could be more
+unjust. The Matabele had not a scrap of title to the
+country, and had not dwelt in it more than a few
+years. The real owners, if you can talk of ownership
+at all, were the unfortunate Bataungs and Barolongs,
+whom the emigrants befriended. The Matabele were
+indeed as murderous a race of savages as ever lived, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+their defeat was a moral as well as a political necessity.
+It is well to protect the aborigine, but when he is
+armed with a dozen assegais and earnestly desires
+your blood, it is safer to shoot him or drive him
+farther afield. That the Boers were guilty of atrocities
+in those fierce wars is undoubted, and, if some
+tales be true, unpardonable. But there are excuses
+to be made. When a man has seen his child writhing
+on a spear and his wife mutilated; when he reflects
+that he stands alone against impossible odds, and has
+a keen sense, too, of Scriptural parallels,&mdash;he may be
+forgiven if he slays and spares not, and even gives
+way to curious cruelties. Revenge and despair may
+play odd pranks with the best men: <i>tout comprendre
+c&rsquo;est tout pardonner</i>.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, is the proper view to take of this footnote
+to the world&rsquo;s history, this Marathon of an unimaginative
+race? It is possible to see in it only an
+attempt of a half-savage people to find elbow-room for
+their misdeeds. The voortrekkers, it has been said,
+fled the approach of a mild and enlightened modern
+policy, invaded a land which was not theirs, slaughtered
+a people who had every right to resist them,
+and created for themselves space to practise their
+tyranny over the native, and perpetuate their exploded
+religious and political creed in a retrograde society.
+It is easy to say this, as it is easy to explain the
+doings of the Pilgrim Fathers as a flight from a too
+liberal and tolerant land to wilds where intolerance
+could rule unchecked. With the best will in the
+world to scrutinise Dutch legends, the Great Trek
+seems to me just that legend which can well support
+any scrutiny. For it was first and foremost a conflict
+between civilisations. There were strong and worthy
+men among the voortrekkers, as there were estimable
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+people among their opponents. The modern political
+creed, based on English constitutionalism, stray doctrines
+of the French Revolution, and certain economic
+maxims from Bentham and Adam Smith, is, in spite
+of minor differences, common to the civilised world.
+This was the creed which was forced upon the Border
+Dutch, and, having received no education in the
+axioms on which it was based, they unhesitatingly
+rejected it, and clung to their old Scriptural feudalism.
+When two creeds come into conflict, the older
+and weaker usually goes under. But in this case the
+men on the losing side were of a peculiar temper and
+dwelt in a peculiar country. They took the bold path
+of carrying themselves and their creed to a new land,
+and so extended its lease of life for the better part of
+a century. Let us take the parallel of the American
+Civil War. The North fought for the cause of the
+larger civic organism and certain social reforms which
+were accidentally linked to it. The South stood for
+the principle of nationality, and for certain traditions
+of their own particular nationality. Roughly speaking,
+it was the same conflict; but the Southern creed
+perished because there was no practicable hinterland
+to which it could be transplanted. Had there been, I
+do not think its most stubborn opponents would have
+denied admiration to so bold an endeavour to preserve
+a national faith.</p>
+
+<p>The Great Trek set its seal upon the new countries.
+The Orange River Colony and the Transvaal are still
+in the rural places an emigrant&rsquo;s land. The farmhouse
+is the unit; the country dorps are merely
+jumbles of little shanties to supply the farmers&rsquo; wants.
+The place-names, with the endless recurrence of simple
+descriptive epithets like Sterkstroom or Klipfontein,
+or expressions of feeling like Nooitgedacht or Welgevonden,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+still tell the tale of the first discoverers.
+There is no obscurity in the nomenclature, such as
+is found in an old land where history has had time
+to be forgotten. Any farm-boy will tell you how this
+river came to be named the Ox-Yoke or that hill the
+Place of Weeping. It has made the people a solemn,
+ungenial folk, calculating and thrifty in their ways,
+and given to living in hovels which suggest that here
+they have no continuing city. Perhaps, as has been
+said, no performance, however stupendous, is worth
+loss of geniality; and the finer graces of life have
+never had a chance on the veld. There is gipsy blood
+in their veins, undying vagabondage behind all their
+sleepy contentment. The quiet of the old waggon
+journeys, when men counted the days on a notched
+stick that they might not miss the still deeper quiet of
+the Sabbaths, has gone into the soul of a race which
+still above all things desires space and leisure. It is
+this gipsy endowment which made them born warriors
+after a fashion; it is this which gives them that
+apathy in the face of war losses which discomfits their
+sentimental partisans. Britain in her day has won
+many strange peoples to her Empire; but none, I
+think, more curious or more hopeful than the stubborn
+children of Uys and Potgieter.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> In Lichtenstein&rsquo;s &lsquo;Travels in South Africa&rsquo; (1803-6) there is an interesting
+and comparatively favourable account of Buys in his Cape
+Colony days.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE BOER IN SPORT.</h4>
+
+<p>It is a fair working rule of life that the behaviour of a
+man in his sports is a good index to his character in
+graver matters. With certain reservations the same
+holds true of a people. For on the lowest interpretation
+of the word &ldquo;sport,&rdquo; the high qualities of courage,
+honour, and self-control are part of the essential equipment,
+and the mode in which such qualities appear is
+a reflex of the idiosyncrasies of national character.
+But this is true mainly of the old settled peoples,
+whose sports have long lost the grim reality in which
+they started. To a race which wages daily war with
+savage nature the refinements of conduct are unintelligible;
+sport becomes business; and unless there is a
+hereditary tradition in the matter the fine manners of
+the true hunter&rsquo;s craft are notable by their absence.</p>
+
+<p>It is worth while considering the Boer in sport, for
+it is there he is seen at his worst. Without tradition
+of fair play, soured and harassed by want and disaster,
+his sport became a matter of commerce, and he held
+no device unworthy in the game. He hunted for the
+pot, and the pot cast its shadow over all his doings.
+His arms were rarely in the old days weapons of precision,
+and we can scarcely expect much etiquette in
+the pursuit of elephant or lion in a bush country with
+a smooth-bore gun which had a quaint trajectory and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+a propensity to burst. The barbarous ways which he
+learned in those wild games he naturally carried into
+easier sports. Let us admit, too, that the Boer race
+has produced a few daring and indefatigable hunters,
+who, though rarely of the class of a Selous or a Hartley,
+were yet in every way worthy of the name of sportsmen.
+I have talked with old Boers from the hunting-veld,
+and in their tales of their lost youth there
+was a fervour which the commercial results of their
+expeditions did not explain. But the fact remains
+that to an Englishman the Boers, with a few exceptions,
+are not a sporting race&mdash;they are not even a race
+of very skilful hunters. They came to the land when
+game was abundant and they thinned it out; but the
+manner of this thinning was as prosaic as the routine
+of their daily lives.</p>
+
+<p>One advantage the Boer possessed in common with
+all dwellers in new lands&mdash;he was familiar from childhood
+with gun and saddle, and had to face the world
+on his own legs from his early boyhood. In this way
+he acquired what one might call the psychological
+equipment of the hunter. Any one who has hunted in
+wild countries will remember the first sense of strangeness,
+the feeling that civilisation had got too far away
+for comfort, which is far more eerie than common
+nervousness. To this feeling the Boer was an utter
+stranger. It was as natural for him to set a trap for
+a lion before returning at nightfall, or to go off to the
+hunting-veld for four winter months, as it was to sow
+in spring and reap in autumn. And because it was an
+incident of his common life he imported into it a
+ridiculous degree of domesticity. On his farm he shot
+for the pot; on his winter treks with stock to the
+bush-veld and the wilder hunting expeditions for skins
+and horns he carried his wife and family in his buck-waggon,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+built himself a hut in the wilds, and reproduced
+exactly the life of the farm. It was easy to
+reproduce anywhere, for it was simplicity itself.
+Mealie-meal, coffee, and some coarse tobacco were his
+supplies, and fresh meat when game fell to his gun.
+So it is not to be wondered at if hunting became to
+him something wholly destitute of romance and adventure,
+an affair like kirk and market, where business
+was the beginning and the end.</p>
+
+<p>But besides the Boer who farmed first and hunted
+afterwards, there was the Boer who hunted by profession.
+The class is almost extinct, but in outlying
+farms one may still meet the old hunter and listen
+to his incredible tales. Some were men of the first
+calibre, the pioneers of a dozen districts, men of profound
+gravity and placid temper, who rarely told the
+tale of their deeds. But the common hunter is above
+all things a talker. Like the Kaffir, he brags incessantly,
+and a little flattery will lead him into wild
+depths. He lies to the stranger, because he cannot be
+contradicted; he lies to his friends, because they are
+connoisseurs in the art and can appreciate the work of
+a master. Boer hunting tales, therefore, should be
+received with extreme caution. They would often
+puzzle an expert lawyer, for they are full of minute
+and fallacious particulars, skilfully put together, and
+forming as a rule a narrative of single-hearted heroism.
+I have listened to a Boer version of a lion-hunt, and I
+have heard the facts from other members of the same
+party; and the contrast was a lesson in the finer arts
+of embroidery. But this society had its compensations.
+Those men live on the outer fringe of Boerdom;
+they have no part in politics and few ties to the
+civilised society of Pretoria; and the result is that
+race hatred and memory of old strifes have always had
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+a smaller place in their hearts. Without the virtues
+of their countryman, they are often free from his more
+unsocial failings.</p>
+
+<p>It is as a big-game hunter that he has acquired his
+reputation, and by big game he meant the lion and
+the elephant, animals which he had to go farther
+afield and run greater risks to secure. The old race
+of elephant-hunters were a strong breed, men in whom
+courage from long experience had become a habit;
+and certainly they had need of it with their long-stocked
+cumbrous flint-locks, which might put out a
+man&rsquo;s shoulder in the recoil. They knew their business
+and took no needless risks, for elephant-hunting
+is a thing which can be learned. Save in thick bush,
+there is little real danger; and if the hunter awaits a
+charging elephant, a point-blank shot at a few yards
+will generally make the animal swerve. Mr Selous,
+whose authority is beyond question, has drawn these
+men as they appeared to him in Mashonaland&mdash;skilful
+shikarris, but jealous, uncompanionable, often treacherous
+as we count honour in sport; and Oswell&rsquo;s
+story is the same. The lion, which, in spite of
+tales to the contrary, remains one of the two most
+dangerous quarries in the world, was a different affair
+to them. There was little commercial profit from
+shooting him, and they had no other motive to face
+danger. Nor can we blame them, for a charging lion
+to a man with an uncertain gun means almost as sure
+destruction as a shipwreck in mid-ocean. The Boer
+hunter shot him for protection, rarely for sport. Very
+few of the lions killed on the high veld fell to rifles; a
+trap-gun set near a drinking-place was the ordinary
+way of dealing with them. Mr Ericsen, the most
+famous of Kalahari pioneers, who brought many herds
+of Ovampa and Damara cattle across the desert, used
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+to tell this story of Boer prowess in lion-hunting. He
+was travelling with a party of Boer hunters, and one
+night a lion killed one of the oxen. The men were in
+a fury, and urged Mr Ericsen to follow, bragging that
+each of them was prepared to tackle the beast single-handed.
+Mr Ericsen said that he was no hunter, but
+promised to let them have his dogs and natives to
+follow up the spoor in the morning. But when the
+morning came the party had silently dispersed,
+mortally afraid lest they should be expected to
+fulfil their promises. In the long list of South
+African big-game hunters the names are mostly
+English,&mdash;Gordon-Cumming, Byles, Hartley, Oswell,
+Sharpe, Selous, Francis, John Macdonald,&mdash;and the
+reason does not wholly lie in the inability and disinclination
+of the Boer to bring his deeds from the
+rhetoric of talk to the calmer record of print.</p>
+
+<p>At other four-footed game, from the buffalo to the
+duiker, the Boer was generally a fair shot, in some
+cases a good shot, but very rarely a great shot. Reputation
+in marksmanship was very much a matter of
+accident. A happy fluke with them, as with natives,
+might make a reputation for life, though the man in
+question shot badly ever afterwards. The number of
+Boer marksmen of the first rank could be counted on
+the ten fingers. On the other hand, the nature of
+their life produced a very high average. The Boer
+boy shot from the day he could hold a rifle, and there
+were few utter failures among them. To be sure, it
+was not pretty shooting. His first business was to
+get the game, and if he could do it by sitting on a
+tree near the stream and killing at twenty yards, he
+did it gladly. When he went hunting he reflected
+that his cartridges cost him 3d. apiece, and were
+all that stood between him and starvation; so very
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+naturally he became as poky a shot as the English
+gamekeeper who is sent out to kill for the table. If a
+hunter took out 500 cartridges and brought back 120
+head of game, he was reckoned a good man at his
+work. To this, of course, there were exceptions, such
+as old Jan Ludig, who once in Waterberg shot five
+gnu (who travel in Indian file) within seven miles.
+The name of Mr Van Rooyen, too, familiar to all
+Matabele hunters, shows what the Dutch race can
+produce in the way of marksmanship and veld-craft.
+In one branch of the chase they were consummate
+masters. The Boer method of stalking is an art by
+itself, for it is really a kind of driving, by showing
+oneself at strategic points till the game is forced into
+suitable ground. In open country they also followed
+with great success the method of riding down.
+Mounted on a good shooting pony, the hunter galloped
+alongside a herd till he was within reasonable
+distance; then in a trice he was on the ground, had
+selected his animal, and fired&mdash;all within a few
+seconds. This was a risky game for a large party,
+owing to the very rude etiquette which prevailed on
+the subject of shooting in your neighbour&rsquo;s direction;
+and I have heard of many seriously wounded and even
+killed by their companions&rsquo; shots. Still another way
+was to ride alongside an animal and shoot him from
+the saddle at a few paces&rsquo; distance. This was called
+&ldquo;brandt&rdquo; or &ldquo;burning,&rdquo; and required a firm seat and
+a very steady eye.</p>
+
+<p>Birds were thought little of, except by some of the
+more advanced farmers and by sportsmen from the
+towns. The country is full of many excellent sporting
+birds: guineafowl, quail, francolin, duck, geese, and
+several kinds of partridge and bustard; but though
+a few farmers shot wildfowl on their dams, the average
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+Boer was a poor shot with a gun, and when he
+did use one he liked to take his birds sitting. A
+hunter might kill a bird neatly with a rifle, which he
+would miss at shorter range with a shot-gun. This
+fashion is quickly passing. Many farmers possess excellent
+guns of the latest pattern; and I have known
+Boers who could hold their own with credit in Norfolk
+or Perthshire. As shooting is becoming more of a
+sport and less of a business, etiquette is growing up;
+and the Boer is learning to spare does and ewes and
+take pleasure in hard shots, where his father would
+have slaughtered casually and walked long and far to
+spare his cartridges. The new order is bringing better
+manners, but nothing can restore the noble herds of
+game which fell unlamented and unnoted under the
+old <i>régime</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Other sports were scarcely considered. He rarely
+fished, leaving the catching of yellow-fish, tiger-fish,
+and barbel to the Kaffirs; and when he did, his rod
+and tackle were neolithic in their simplicity. I have
+never seen a Boer rod which had any of the proper
+attributes of a rod, and he used to profess scorn for a
+man with a greenheart or a split-cane as for one who
+would stipulate for an elegant spade before digging
+potatoes. Sometimes in a village or among neighbouring
+farmers flat-races would be got up; but the
+Boer pony was bred more for endurance than for
+speed, and a small selling-plate meeting was about
+the limit of his horse-racing. I have never seen or
+heard of a Boer steeplechase. On the other hand, he
+had a wonderful skill, as our army discovered, in riding
+at full speed over a breakneck country,&mdash;a skill due,
+perhaps, more to veld-craft than to horsemanship.
+Hunting big game on horseback taught him, as part
+of the business, to leave much to his horse; and his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+horse rarely played him false. Whether he was clattering
+down a stony hillside, or dodging through thick
+scrub, or racing over veld honeycombed with ant-bear
+holes, he rode with a loose rein and full confidence
+in his animal. It is difficult to frame an opinion
+on his horsemanship. His long stirrups, the easy
+&ldquo;tripple&rdquo; of his horse, and his loose seat make him
+a type of horseman very different to our cavalryman
+or Leicestershire master of hounds. But, loose as he
+sits, he can stick on over most kinds of country, and
+he is a natural horsemaster of the first order. A Boer
+knows by instinct how to manage his horse: he never
+frets him; he rarely ill-treats him; and he can judge to
+a mile the limits of his endurance.</p>
+
+<p>As a sportsman, then, the Boer is scarcely at his best.
+He has shown himself dull, sluggish, unimaginative,
+capable of both skill and endurance, but a niggard in
+the exercise of either, unless compelled by hunger or
+hope of gain. Unlike most races, it is in his sports
+that he shows his most unlovely traits, and that flat
+incomprehensible side of his character which has
+puzzled an ornamental world. The truth is that he
+is, speaking broadly, without imagination and that
+dash of adventure which belongs to all imaginative
+men. The noble spurs of the Drakensberg rose within
+sight of his home; but he would as soon have thought
+of climbing a peak for the sport or the scenery as of
+dabbling in water-colours. A dawn was to him only
+the beginning of the day, a mellow veld sunset merely
+a sign to outspan; and I should be afraid to guess his
+thoughts on a primrose by the river&rsquo;s brim, or whatever
+is the South African equivalent. His religion
+made him credulous, but his temperament transformed
+the most stupendous of the world&rsquo;s histories into a
+kind of Farmer&rsquo;s Almanac, and Eastern poetry became
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+for him a literal record of fact. A friend of mine,
+travelling with a Boer hunter in the far north, called
+his attention to the beauty of the starry night, and,
+thinking to interest his companion, told him a few
+simple astronomical truths. The Boer angrily asked
+him why he lied so foolishly. &ldquo;Do not I read in the
+Book,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that the world stands on four
+pillars?&rdquo; And when my friend inquired about the
+foundation of the pillars, the Boer sulked for two
+days. But there is one trait which he shared with
+all true sportsmen, a love of wild animals. To be
+sure, the finest reserves of buck were made by new-comers,
+such as Mr van der Byl&rsquo;s park at Irene and
+Mr Forbes&rsquo;s at Athole, in Ermelo, both unhappily
+ruined by the war. But many veld farmers had their
+small reserves of springbok or blesbok, and permitted
+no hunting within them. Some did it as a speculation,
+being always ready to lease a day&rsquo;s shooting to a
+gun from Johannesburg, and many for the reason that
+they sought big farms and complete solitude&mdash;to
+pander to a sense of possession. But in all, perhaps,
+there was a strain of honest pleasure in wild life, a
+desire to encircle their homes with the surroundings
+of their early hunting days. In which case, it is
+another of the anomalies which warn us off hasty
+generalisations.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE BOER IN ALL SERIOUSNESS.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></h4>
+
+<p>The Boer character has suffered by its simplicity. It
+has, as a rule, been crudely summed up in half a dozen
+denunciatory sentences, or, in the case of more curious
+students, it has been analysed and defined with a
+subtlety for which there is no warrant. A hasty
+condemnation is not the method for a product so full
+of difficulty and interest, and a chain of laborious
+paradoxes scarcely enables us to comprehend a thing
+which is pre-eminently broad and simple. The Boer
+has rarely been understood by people who give their
+impressions to the world, but he has been very completely
+understood by plain men who have dwelt
+beside him and experienced his ways in the many
+relations of life. It is easy to dismiss him with a
+hostile epigram; easy, too, to build up an edifice of
+neat contradictions, after the fashion of what Senancour
+has called &ldquo;le vulgaire des sages,&rdquo; and label it the
+Boer character. The first way commends itself to
+party feeling; the second appeals to a nation which
+has confessedly never understood its opponents, and
+is ready now to admit its ignorance and excuse itself
+by the amazing complexity of the subject. Sympathy,
+which is the only path to true understanding, was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+made difficult by the mists of war, and, when all was
+over, by the exceeding dreariness of the conquered
+people. There was little romance in the slouching
+bearded men with flat faces and lustreless eyes who
+handed in their rifles and came under our flag;
+National Scouts, haggling over money terms, and the
+begging tour of the generals, seemed to have reduced
+honour to a matter of shillings and pence, and dispelled
+the glamour of many hard-fought battlefields.
+There is a perennial charm about an <i>ancien régime</i>;
+but this poor <i>ancien régime</i> had no purple and fine
+gold for the sentimental&mdash;only a hodden-grey burgess
+society, an unlovely Kirk, and a prosaic constitution.</p>
+
+<p>And yet the proper understanding of this character
+is of the first political importance, and a task well
+worth undertaking for its own sake. Those men are
+for ever our neighbours and fellow-citizens, and it is
+the part of wisdom to understand the present that it
+may prepare against the future. To the amateur of
+racial character there is the chance of reading in the
+largest letters the lesson of historical development,
+for we know their antecedents, we can see clearly the
+simple events of their recent history, and we have
+before us a product, as it were, isolated and focussed
+for observation. Nor can sympathy be wanting in
+a fair observer,&mdash;sympathy for courage, tenacity of
+purpose, a simple fidelity to racial ideals. No man
+who has lived much with the people can regard them
+without a little aversion, a strong liking, and a large
+and generous respect.</p>
+
+<p>In any racial inquiry there are certain determinant
+factors which form the axioms of the problem. In
+the case of a long-settled people these are so intricate
+and numerous that it is impossible to disentangle
+more than a few of the more obvious, and we explain
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+development, naturally and logically, rather by the
+conscious principles which the race assimilated than
+by the objective forces which acted upon it from the
+outer world. But in the case of a savage or a backward
+nation, the history is simple, the ingredients in
+racial character few and intelligible. The wars of the
+spirit and the growth of philosophies are potent influences,
+but their history is speculative and recondite.
+But the struggle for bare life falls always in simple
+forms, and physical forces leave their mark rudely
+upon the object they work on. In this case we have
+a national life less than a century long, a mode of
+society all but uniform, a creed short and unsophisticated,
+an intelligible descent, and a country which
+stamps itself readily upon its people. Origin, history,
+natural environment, accidental modes of civilisation,
+these are the main factors in that composite thing
+we call character. We can read them in the individual:
+we can read them writ large in a race which
+is little more than the individual writ large. In
+complex societies the composition is a chemical
+process, the result is a new product, not to be
+linked with any ingredient; the soul and mind of
+the populace is something different in kind from the
+average soul and mind of its units. But in this
+collection of hardy individualists there was no novel
+result, and the type is repeated with such scanty
+variations that we may borrow the attributes of the
+individual for our definition of the race.</p>
+
+<p>Descent, history, natural environment have laid the
+foundation of the Boer character. The old sluggish
+Batavian stock (not of the best quality, for the first
+settlers were as a rule of the poorest and least reputable
+class) was leavened with a finer French strain,
+and tinctured with a little native blood. Living a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+clannish life in solitude, the people intermarried closely,
+and suffered the fate of inbreeders in a loss of facial
+variety and a gradual coarsening of feature. Their
+history was a record of fierce warfare with savage
+nature, and the evolution of a peculiar set of traditions
+which soon came into opposition with imported
+European ideas. They evolved, partly from the needs
+of their society and partly from distorted echoes of
+revolutionary dogma, an embryo political creed, and in
+religion they established a variant of sixteenth-century
+Protestantism. Their life, and the vast spaces
+of earth and sky amid which they lived, strengthened
+the patriarchal individualism in their blood. The
+whole process of development, so remote from the
+common racial experience, produced in the Boer
+character a tissue of contradictions which resist all
+attempts at an easy summary. He was profoundly
+religious, with the language of piety always on his
+lips, and yet deeply sunk in matter. Without imagination,
+he had the habits of a recluse and in a
+coarse way the instincts of the poet. He was extremely
+narrow in a bargain, and extremely hospitable.
+With a keen sense of justice, he connived at
+corruption and applauded oppression. A severe moral
+critic, he was often lax, and sometimes unnatural, in
+his sexual relations. He was brave in sport and
+battle, but his heroics had always a mercantile basis,
+and he would as soon die for an ideal, as it is commonly
+understood, as sell his farm for a sixpence.
+There were few virtues or vices which one could deny
+him utterly or with which one could credit him honestly.
+In short, the typical Boer to the typical observer
+became a sort of mixture of satyr, Puritan,
+and successful merchant, rather interesting, rather
+distasteful, and wholly incomprehensible.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+And yet the phenomenon is perfectly normal. The
+Boer is a representative on a grand scale of a type
+which no nation is without. He is the ordinary backward
+countryman, more backward and more of a
+countryman than is usual in our modern world. At
+one time this was the current view&mdash;a &ldquo;race of farmers,&rdquo;
+a &ldquo;pastoral folk&rdquo;; but the early months of the
+war brought about a reversal of judgment, and he
+was credited with the most intricate urban vices.
+Such a false opinion was the result of a too conventional
+view of the rural character. There is nothing
+Arcadian about the Boer, as there is certainly nothing
+Arcadian about the average peasant. A Corot background,
+a pastoral pipe, and a flavour of honeysuckle,
+must be expelled from the picture. To analyse what
+is grandiloquently called the &ldquo;folk-heart,&rdquo; is to see in
+its rude virtues and vices an exact replica of the life
+of the veld. &ldquo;Simple&rdquo; and &ldquo;pastoral,&rdquo; on a proper
+understanding of the terms, are the last words in
+definition.</p>
+
+<p>Let us take an average household. Jan Celliers
+(pronounced Seljee) lives on his farm of 3000 morgen
+with his second wife and a family of twelve. His
+father was a voortrekker, and the great Sarel was a
+far-out cousin. Two cousins of his mother and their
+families squat as bywoners on his land, and an orphan
+daughter of his sister lives in his household. The
+farmhouse is built of sun-dried bricks, whitewashed in
+front, and consists of a small kitchen, a large room
+which is parlour and dining-room in one, and three
+small chambers where the family sleep. Twelve families
+of natives live in a little kraal, cultivate their own
+mealie-patches, and supply the labour of the farm,
+while two half-caste Cape boys, Andries and Abraham,
+who attend to the horses, have a rude shanty behind
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+the stable. Jan has a dam from which he irrigates
+ten acres of mealies, pumpkins, and potatoes. For the
+rest he has 500 Afrikander oxen, which make him a
+man of substance among his neighbours, including two
+spans of matched beasts, fawn and black, for which he
+has refused an offer of £30 apiece. He is not an active
+farmer, for he does not need to bestir himself. His
+land yields him with little labour enough to live on,
+and a biscuit-tin full of money, buried in the orchard
+below the fifth apricot-tree from the house, secures his
+mind against an evil day. But he likes to ride round
+his herds in the early morning, and to smoke his pipe
+in his mealie-patch of a late afternoon. He is not
+fond of neighbours, but it is pleasant to him once in a
+while to go to Pretoria and buy a cartload of fancy
+groceries and the very latest plough in the store. As
+a boy Jan was a great hunter, and has been with his
+father to the Limpopo and the Rooi Rand; but of late
+game has grown scarce, and Jan is not the fellow to stir
+himself to find it. Now and then he shoots a springbok,
+and brags wonderfully about his shots, quite
+regardless of the presence of his sons who accompany
+him. These sons are heavy loutish boys, finer shots
+by far than Jan, for they have that infallible eyesight
+of the Boer youth. They, too, are idle, and are
+much abused by their mother, when she is wide awake
+enough to look after them. The daughters are plump
+and shapeless, with pallid complexions inside their
+sun-bonnets, and a hoydenish shyness towards neighbours.
+Not that they see many neighbours, though
+rumour has it that young Coos Pretorius, son of
+the rich Pretorius, comes now and then to &ldquo;opsitten&rdquo;
+with the eldest girl. Jan believes in an Old Testament
+God, whom he hears of at nachtmaals, for the kirk is
+too far off for the ordinary Sabbath-day&rsquo;s journey; but
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+he believes much more in a spook which lives in the
+old rhinoceros-hole in the spruit, and in his own
+amazing merits. He is sleepily good-natured towards
+the world, save to a Jew storekeeper in the town who
+calls himself on the sign above his door the &ldquo;Old
+Boer&rsquo;s Friend,&rdquo; and on one occasion cheated him out of
+£5. But Jan has also had his triumphs, notably when
+he induced a coal prospector to prospect in an impossible
+place and leave him, free of cost, an excellent
+well. When war broke out Jan and three of his sons,
+sorely against their will, went out on commando. Two
+of the boys went to Ceylon, one fell at Spionkop, and
+Jan himself remained in the field till the end, and came
+back as proud as a peacock to repatriation rations.
+His womenfolk were in the Middelburg Burgher camp,
+where they acquired a taste for society which almost
+conquered their love for the farm. At any rate, it was
+with bitter complaints that they sat again under a
+makeshift roof, with no neighbours except the korhaan
+and a span of thin repatriation oxen. Jan did not
+enjoy war. At first he was desperately afraid, and
+only the strangeness of the country and the presence
+of others kept him from trekking for home. By-and-by
+he found amusement in the sport of the thing, and
+realised that with caution he might keep pretty well
+out of the way of harm. But in the guerilla warfare
+of the last year there was no sport, only stark unrelieved
+misery. Sometimes he thought of slipping
+over to the enemy and surrendering; often he wished
+he had been captured and sent to Ceylon with his
+boys; but something which he did not understand and
+had never suspected before began to rise in his soul, a
+wild obstinacy and a resolve to stand out to the last.
+Once in a night attack he was chased by two mounted
+infantrymen, and turned to bay in a narrow place,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+shooting one man and wounding the other badly. He
+did his best for the sufferer before making off to the
+rendezvous, an incident which has appeared in the
+picture papers (Jan is depicted about eight feet high,
+with a face like Moses, whereas he really is a broken-nosed
+little man), and which shows that he had both
+courage and kindness somewhere in his slow soul. But
+he gladly welcomed peace; he had never cared greatly
+for politics, and had an ancestral grudge against the
+Kruger family; and when he had assured himself that,
+instead of losing all, he would get most of his property
+back, and perhaps a little for interest, he became quite
+loyal, and figured prominently on the local repatriation
+board. He takes the resident magistrate out shooting,
+and has just sold to the Government a fraction of his
+farm at an enormous profit.</p>
+
+<p>Such is an ordinary type of our new citizens. If
+we look at him the typical countryman stands out
+clear from the mists of tortuous psychology. It is an
+error, doubtless, to assume that the primitive nature
+is always simple; it is often bewilderingly complex.
+An elaborate civilisation may produce a type which
+can be analysed under a dozen categories; while the
+savage or the backwoodsman may show a network of
+curiously interlaced motives. But the man is familiar.
+We know others of the family; we have met him in
+the common relations of life; he stands before us as
+a concrete human being.</p>
+
+<p>His most obvious characteristic is his mental
+sluggishness. Dialectic rarely penetrates the chain-armour
+of his prejudices. He has nothing of the
+keen receptive mind which, like a sensitive plant, is
+open to all the influences of life. His views are the
+outcome of a long and sluggish growth, and cling like
+mandrakes to the roots of his being. He makes no
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+deductions from ordinary events, and he never follows
+a thing to its logical conclusion. His blind faith
+requires a cataclysm to shake it, and to revise a belief
+is impossible for him save under the stress of pain.
+Death and burning towns may reveal to him a principle,
+but unless it is written large in letters of blood
+and fire it escapes his stagnant intelligence. Change
+is painful to all human creatures, but such coercion of
+change is doubly painful, since he has no scheme of
+thought into which it can fit, and it means, therefore,
+the upturning of the foundations of his world. But
+the countryman, while he holds tenaciously his innermost
+beliefs, has a vast capacity for doing lip-service
+to principles which he does not understand. He sees
+that certain shibboleths command respect and bring
+material gain, so he glibly adopts them without
+allowing them for a moment to encroach upon the
+cherished arcana of his faith. Hence comes the apparent
+inconsistency of many simple folk. The Boer
+had a dozen principles which he would gladly sell to
+the highest bidder; but he had some hundreds of
+prejudices which he held dearer (almost) than life.
+His principles were European importations, democratic
+political dogmas, which he used to excellent purpose
+without caring or understanding, moral maxims which
+bore no relation to his own ragged and twisted ethics.
+The mild international morality which his leaders were
+wont to use as a reproach to Britain seems comically
+out of place when we reflect upon the high-handed international
+code, born of filibustering and Kaffir wars,
+which he found in the Scriptures and had long ago
+adopted for his own. His political confession of faith,
+which the framers of his constitution had borrowed
+from Europe and America, with its talk of representation
+and equal rights and delegated powers, contrasted
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+oddly with the fierce individualism which was his
+innermost conviction, and the cabals and &ldquo;spoils to
+the victor&rdquo; policy which made up his daily practice.
+His religion had a like character. In its essentials it
+was the same which a generation or two ago held sway
+over Galloway peasants and Hebridean fishermen;
+but the results were very different. The stern hard-bitten
+souls who saw the devil in most of the works of
+God, and lived ever under a great Taskmaster&rsquo;s eye,
+had no kinship with the easy-going sleek-lipped Boer
+piety. The Boer religion in practice was a judicious
+excerpt from the easier forms of Christianity, while its
+theory was used to buttress his self-sufficiency and
+mastery over weaker neighbours. His political creed
+may be stated shortly as a belief in his right to all
+new territories in which he set foot, his indefeasible
+right to control the native tribes in the way he thought
+best, a denial of all right of the State to interfere with
+him, but an assertion of the duty of the State to enrich
+him. To these cardinal articles liberty, equality,
+and fraternity were added as an elegant appendage
+before publication. So, too, in his religion: God made
+man of two colours, white and black, the former to
+rule the latter till the end of time; God led Israel out
+of Egypt and gave to them new lands for their inalienable
+heritage; any Egyptian who followed was
+the apportioned prey of the chosen people, and it was
+a duty to spoil him; this beneficent God must therefore
+be publicly recognised and frequently referred to
+in the speech of daily life, but in the case of the Elect
+considerable latitude may be allowed in the practice of
+the commandments,&mdash;such may fairly be taken as the
+ordinary unformulated Boer creed. But, as the statement
+was too short and bare, all the finer virtues had
+to be attached in public profession.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+A countryman lives in a narrow world which he
+knows intimately, but beyond is an unexplored region
+which he knows of by hearsay and fears. He is not
+naturally suspicious. Among his fellows he is often
+confiding to a fault, and a little acquaintance with
+a dreaded object will often result in a revulsion to
+contempt. The Boer has in a peculiar degree this
+characteristic of rural peoples. He has an immense
+awe of an alien Power while he does not know it, but
+once let it commit itself to some weakness, and the
+absence of all mental perspective changes the exaggerated
+awe into an equally exaggerated condescension.
+This truth is written clear over the whole history of
+England in Africa. A lost battle, a political withdrawal,
+a wavering statesman, have had moral effects
+of incalculable significance. The burgher who opposed
+us with terror and despair became at the first gleam
+of success a screeching cock-of-the-walk, and this attitude,
+jealously fostered, obscured the world to him
+for the rest of his days. In our threats he saw bluster,
+in our kindness he read weakness, in our diplomacy
+folly; and he went out at last with the fullest confidence,
+which three years of misery have scarcely
+uprooted. This is one side of the parochial mind; the
+other is the suspicion which became his attitude to
+everything beyond his beacons. It is not the proverbial
+&ldquo;slimness&rdquo;; that graceful quality is merely
+the rustic cunning which he thought the foundation
+of business, a quality as common on Australian stock-runs
+and Scottish sheep-farms. His suspicion was his
+own peculiar possession, born of his history and his
+race, and, above all, of his intercourse with native
+tribes. He did not give his confidence readily, as who
+would if he believed that the world was in league
+against him? New ideas, new faces, new inventions
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+were all put on his black list. Like Mr By-ends, he
+found his principles easy and profitable, and was
+resolved to stick to them. Two forces, however,
+tended to undermine his distrust. One was his intense
+practicality. If his principles ceased to be profitable,
+he was prepared, against the grain, to consider
+emendations. The second was his crude pleasure in
+novelties, the curious delight of a child in a mechanical
+toy. A musical box, a portrait of Mr Kruger which,
+when wound up, emitted the Volkslied, or the latest
+variety of mealie-crusher, were attractions which he
+had no power to resist.</p>
+
+<p>At the root of all his traits lies a meagre imagination.
+In religion he turns the stupendous tales of
+Scripture into a parish chronicle, with God as a
+benevolent burgomaster and Moses and the prophets as
+glorified landrosts. In politics no Boer since President
+Burgers saw things with a large vision, and his
+rhetorical dreams were folly to his countrymen. The
+idea of a great Afrikander state, very vigorously held
+elsewhere in South Africa, had small hold on the
+ordinary population of the Republics, save upon sons of
+English fathers or mothers, half-educated journalists,
+and European officials. In the wars which he waged
+he saw little of the murky splendour which covers the
+horrors of death. The pageantry of the veld was nothing
+to him, and in the amenities of life he scarcely advanced
+beyond bare physical comfort. He had neither
+art nor literature. If we except Mr Reitz&rsquo;s delightful
+verses, which at their happiest are translations of
+Burns and Scott, he had not even the songs which are
+commonly found among rural peoples. His nursery
+tales and his few superstitions were borrowed from the
+Kaffir. On one side only do we discern any trace of
+imaginative power. Somehow at the back of his soul
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+was the love of the wilds and the open road&mdash;a call
+which, after years of settled life, had still power to stir
+the blood of the old hunter. He was not good at
+pictorial forecasts, but he had one retrospect stamped
+on his brain, and this hunger for old days was a spark
+of fire which kept warm a corner of his being.</p>
+
+<p>The typical countryman he remains, typical in his
+limitations and the vices which followed them. The
+chief was his incurable mendacity. Truth-speaking
+is always a relative virtue, being to some men an easy
+habit, and to others of a livelier fancy a constant
+and strenuous effort. The Boer is not brutal, he is
+eminently law-abiding and sober, and kindly in most
+of the relations of life. He has the rustic looseness in
+sexual morals, and in the remoter farmhouses this
+looseness often took the form of much hideous and
+unnatural vice. But the cardinal fault, obvious to the
+most casual observer, is a contempt for truth in every
+guise. Masterful liars, who have held their own in
+most parts of the world, are vanquished by the systematic
+perjury of the veld. The habit is, no doubt,
+partly learned from the Kaffir, a fine natural professor
+of the art; but to its practice the Boer brought a
+stolid patience, an impassive countenance, and a
+limited imagination which kept him consistent. He
+bragged greatly, since to a solitary man with a high
+self-esteem this is the natural mode of emphasising his
+personality on the rare occasions when he mixes with
+his fellows. He lied in business for sound practical
+reasons. He lied at home by the tacit consent of his
+household. The truest way to outwit him, as many
+found, was to tell him the naked truth, since his
+suspicion saw in every man his own duplicity. But
+because he is a true countryman, when once he has
+proved a man literally truthful he will trust him with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+a pathetic simplicity. There were Englishmen in the
+land before the war, as there are Englishmen to-day,
+whose word to the Boer mind was an inviolable
+oath.</p>
+
+<p>So far I have described the average Boer failings
+with all the unsympathetic plainness which a hostile
+observer could desire. But there is a very different
+side to which it is pleasant to turn. If he has the
+countryman&rsquo;s faults strongly developed, he has also in
+a high degree the country virtues. Simplicity is not
+an unmixed blessing; but it is the mother of certain
+fine qualities, which are apt to be lost sight of by a
+sophisticated world. He could live bare and sleep
+hard when the need arose; and if he was sluggish in
+his daily life it was the indolence of the sleepy natural
+world and not the enervation of decadence. Because
+his needs were few he was supremely adaptable: a
+born pioneer, with his household gods in a waggon
+and his heart turning naturally to the wilds. The
+grandeur of nature was lost on him; but there is a
+certain charm in the way in which he brought all
+things inside the pale of his domesticity. His homely
+images have their own picturesqueness, as when he
+called the morning star, which summoned him to
+inspan, the <i>voorlooper</i>, or &ldquo;little boy who leads out
+the oxen.&rdquo; It is the converse of sublimity, and itself
+not unsublime. His rude dialect, almost as fine as lowland
+Scots for telling country stories, is full of metaphors,
+so to speak, in solution, often coarse, but always
+the fruit of direct and vigorous observation. In short,
+he had a personality which stands out simply in all his
+doings, making him a living clear-cut figure among
+the amorphous shades of the indoor life.</p>
+
+<p>Wild tales and judicious management from Pretoria
+succeeded in combining him temporarily into a semblance
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+of a state and a very formidable reality of an
+army; but at bottom he is the most dogmatic individualist
+in the world. His allegiance was never to
+a chief or a state, but to his family. The family was
+generously interpreted, so that distant relations came
+within its fold. This clannishness has not been sufficiently
+recognised; but it is a real social force, and
+of great importance to a survey of Boer society. In
+the country farms, with their system of bywoners,
+a whole cycle of relations lived, all depending upon
+the head of the household for their subsistence. When
+sons or daughters married they lived on in the homestead,
+and as their children grew up and married in
+turn they squatted on a corner of the farm. The
+system led to abuses, notably in the ridiculous subdivision
+of land and the endless servitudes and burdens
+imposed on real estate; but it relieved the community
+of any need for orphanages and workhouses. The
+Boer&rsquo;s treatment of orphans does him much credit.
+However poor, a family would make room for orphaned
+children, and there was no distinction in their usage.
+It is a primitive virtue, a heritage from the days
+when white folk were few in numbers: a little family
+in the heart of savagery, bound together by a common
+origin and a common fear.</p>
+
+<p>But his chief virtue was his old-fashioned hospitality.
+A stranger rarely knocked at his gates in vain. You
+arrived at a farmhouse and asked leave to outspan by
+the spruit. Permission was freely granted, and in a
+little girls came out with coffee for the travellers. An
+invitation to supper usually followed, and there is no
+better fare in the world than a chicken roasted by a
+Boer housewife and her home-made sausages. Then
+followed slow talk over deep-bowled pipes, and then
+good-night, with much handshaking and good wishes.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+And so all over the veld. The family might be
+wretchedly poor, but they dutifully and cheerfully
+gave what they had. In the early months of peace
+it was a common thing to come on a Boer family
+living in a hut of biscuit tins or a torn tent, with
+scanty rations and miserably ragged clothes. But
+those people, in most cases, set the little they had
+gladly before the stranger. The Boer, who will
+perjure himself deeply to save a shilling, will part
+with a pound&rsquo;s worth of entertainment without a
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>And, as a host, he has a natural dignity beyond
+praise. A placid life, backed by an overwhelming
+sense of worth, is a fine basis for good manners.
+Boastfulness and prejudice may come later, but the
+first impression is of an antique kindliness and ease.
+The veld has no nerves, no uneasy consciousness of
+inferiority, least of all the cringing friendliness of
+the low European. The farmer, believing in nothing
+beyond his ken, makes the stranger welcome as a
+harmless courier from a trivial world. No contrast
+can be more vivid than between the nervous, bustling
+cosmopolitans who throng the Rand and the silent
+veld-dwellers. The Boer type of countenance is not
+often handsome; frequently it is flat and expressionless,
+lustreless grey eyes with small pupils, and hair
+growing back from chin and lip. But it is almost
+always the embodiment of repose, and in the finer
+stock it sometimes reaches an archaic and patriarchal
+dignity. The same praise cannot be given to the
+<i>jeunesse dorée</i> of the Afrikander world, who acquired
+the smattering of an education and migrated
+to the towns. Ignorant, swaggering, mentally and
+bodily underbred, they form a distressing class of
+people who have somehow missed civilisation and hit
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+upon the vulgarity of its decline. They claim glibly
+and falsely the virtues which their fathers possessed
+without advertisement. Much of the bad blood and
+spurious nationalism in the country comes from this
+crew, who, in partnership with the worst type of
+European adventurer, have done their best to discredit
+their nation. The true country Boer regards
+them much as the silent elder Mirabeau and Zachary
+Macaulay must have regarded their voluble sons&mdash;with
+considerable distrust, a little disfavour, and not
+a little secret admiration for a trick which has no
+place in his world.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">Understanding is the only basis of a policy towards
+this remarkable section of our fellow-citizens&mdash;understanding,
+and a decent abstinence from subtleties.
+We used to flatter our souls that we created our
+Empire in a fit of absent-mindedness, and in all our
+troubles convinced ourselves that we were destined to
+&ldquo;muddle through.&rdquo; But there are limits to this policy
+of serene trust in Providence, and it is rather our duty
+to thank God we have taken so few falls, and brace
+our minds to forethought and prudence. The Boer is
+the easiest creature in the world to govern. He is
+naturally law-abiding, and he has an enormous respect
+for the accomplished fact. True union may take long,
+but the nominal amalgamation which is necessary for
+smooth government already exists. We must understand
+how slow he is to learn, how deep his pride is,
+how lively his suspicions. Spiritually he will be a
+slow pupil, but with proper care politically he may be
+a ready learner. He has a curiously acute sense of
+justice, which makes him grumble at compulsion, but
+obey, and end by applauding. He is also quick to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+realise what is competent and successful in administration.
+He will give everything a fair trial, waiting,
+watching, and forming his slow mind; and if a
+thing is a practical fiasco, he will laugh at it in the
+end. The practical is the last touchstone for him.
+He is not easily made drunk with the ideals of
+ordinary democracy; an efficient government, however
+naked of adornments, will always command his
+respect, and the fool, though buttressed with every
+sublime aspiration, will find him adamant. To a
+government which can estimate the situation soberly
+and face it manfully he is a simple problem. But he
+will be a hard critic of weakness, and when once his
+laggard opinions are formed it will be a giant&rsquo;s task to
+shake them. The war has broken his old arrogance,
+and he now waits to make up his mind on the new
+<i>régime</i>. We shall get justice from him from the start&mdash;laborious
+justice and nothing more. If we fail, all
+the honesty of purpose on earth will not save us; for to
+the Boer good intentions may preserve a man&rsquo;s soul in
+another world, but they cannot excuse him in this one.
+There is much practical truth in Bunyan&rsquo;s parable
+when he makes Old Honest come &ldquo;from the town of
+Stupidity,&rdquo; which town &ldquo;lieth four degrees <em>beyond</em> the
+City of Destruction.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>If the Boer is once won to our side we shall have
+secured one of the greatest colonising forces in the
+world. We can ask for no better dwellers upon a
+frontier. If the plateaux of our Central and East
+African possessions are to be permanently held by the
+white man, I believe it will be by this people who
+have never turned their back upon a country which
+seemed to promise good pasture-land. Other races
+send forth casual pioneers, who return and report and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+then go elsewhere; but the Boer takes his wife and
+family and all his belongings, and in a decade is
+part of the soil. In the midst of any savagery he
+will plant his rude domesticity, and the land is won.
+With all her colonising activity, Britain can ill afford
+to lose from her flag a force so masterful, persistent,
+and sure.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a>
+The word &ldquo;Boer&rdquo; is used in this chapter to denote the average country
+farmer in the new colonies, and not the educated Dutch of the towns.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>PART II.<br />
+<br />
+NOTES OF TRAVEL</h2>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78"><!-- blank page --></a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+<h4>EVENING ON THE HIGH VELD.</h4>
+
+<p>We leave the broken highway, channelled by rains
+and rutted by ox-waggons, and plunge into the leafy
+coolness of a great wood. Great in circumference
+only, for the blue gums and pines and mimosa-bushes
+are scarcely six years old, though the feathery leafage
+and the frequency of planting make a thicket of the
+young trees. The rides are broad and grassy as an
+English holt, dipping into hollows, climbing steep
+ridges, and showing at intervals little side-alleys,
+ending in green hills, with the accompaniment everywhere
+of the spicy smell of gums and the deep rooty
+fragrance of pines. Sometimes all alien woodland
+ceases, and we ride through aisles of fine trees, which
+have nothing save height to distinguish them from
+Rannoch or Rothiemurchus. A deer looks shyly out,
+which might be a roebuck; the cooing of doves, the
+tap of a woodpecker, even the hawk above in the blue
+heavens, have nothing strange. Only an occasional
+widow-bird with its ridiculous flight, an ant-heap to
+stumble over, and a clump of scarlet veld-flowers are
+there to mark the distinction. Here we have the
+sign visible of man&rsquo;s conquest over the soil, and of
+the real adaptability of the land. With care and
+money great tracts of the high-veld might change
+their character. An English country-house, with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+deer-park and coverts and fish-ponds, could be created
+here and in many kindred places, where the owner
+might forget his continent. And in time this will
+happen. As the rich man pushes farther out from
+the city for his home, he will remake the most complaisant
+of countries to suit his taste, and, save for
+climate and a certain ineradicable flora and fauna,
+patches of Surrey and Perthshire will appear on this
+kindly soil.</p>
+
+<p>With the end of the wood we come out upon the
+veld. What is this mysterious thing, this veld, so
+full of memories for the English race, so omnipresent,
+so baffling? Like the words &ldquo;prairie,&rdquo; &ldquo;moor,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;down,&rdquo; it is easy to make a rough mental picture of.
+It will doubtless become in time, when South Africa
+gets herself a literature, a conventional counter in
+description. To-day every London shopboy knows
+what this wilderness of coarse green or brown grasses
+is like; he can picture the dry streams, the jagged
+kopjes, the glare of summer, and the bitter winter
+cold. It has entered into patriotic jingles, and has
+given a <i>mise-en-scène</i> to crude melodrama. And yet
+no natural feature was ever so hard to fully realise.
+One cannot think of a monotonous vastness, like the
+prairie, for it is everywhere broken up and varied. It
+is too great for an easy appreciation, as of an English
+landscape, too subtle and diverse for rhetorical generalities&mdash;a
+thing essentially mysterious and individual.
+In consequence it has a charm which the common
+efforts of mother-earth after grandiloquence can never
+possess. There is something homely and kindly and
+soothing in it, something essentially humane and fitted
+to the needs of human life. Climb to the top of the
+nearest ridge, and after a broad green valley there
+will be another ridge just the same: cross the mountains
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+fifty miles off, and the country will repeat itself
+as before. But this sameness in outline is combined
+with an infinite variety in detail, so that we readily
+take back our first complaint of monotony, and wonder
+at the intricate novelty of each vista.</p>
+
+<p>Here the veld is simply the broad green side of a
+hill, with blue points of mountain peeping over the
+crest, and a ragged brown road scarred across it.
+The road is as hard as adamant, a stiff red clay baked
+by the sun into porphyry, with fissures yawning here
+and there, so deep that often it is hard to see the
+gravel at the bottom. A cheerful country to drive
+in on a dark night in a light English cart, but less
+deadly to the lumbering waggons of the farmer. We
+choose the grass to ride on, which grows in coarse
+clumps with bare soil between. Here, too, are traps
+for the loose rider. A conical ant-heap with odd perforations,
+an ant-bear hole three feet down, or, most
+insidious of all, a meerkat&rsquo;s hole hidden behind a tuft
+of herbage. A good pony can gallop and yet steer,
+provided the rider trusts it; but the best will make
+mistakes, and on occasion roll over like a rabbit.
+Most men begin with a dreary apprenticeship to
+spills; but it is curious how few are hurt, despite
+the hardness of the ground. One soon learns the art
+of falling clear and falling softly.</p>
+
+<p>The four o&rsquo;clock December sun blazes down on us,
+raising hot odours from the grass. A grey African
+hare starts from its form, a meerkat slips away indignantly,
+a widow-bird, coy and ridiculous like a flirtatious
+widow, flops on ahead. The sleepy, long-horned
+Afrikander cattle raise listless eyes as we pass, and a
+few gaudy butterflies waver athwart us. Otherwise
+there is no sound or sight of life. Flowers of rich
+colours&mdash;chrysanthemums, gentians, geraniums&mdash;most
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+of them variants of familiar European species, grow in
+clumps so lowly that one can only observe them by
+looking directly from above. It is this which makes
+the veld so colourless to a stranger. There are no
+gowans or buttercups or heather, to blazon it like a
+spring meadow or an August moorland. Five yards
+off, and nothing is visible but the green stalks of
+grass or a red boulder.</p>
+
+<p>At the summit of the ridge there is a breeze and a
+far prospect. The road still runs on up hill and down
+dale, through the distant mountains, and on to the
+great pastoral uplands of Rustenburg and the far
+north-west. On either side the same waving grass,
+now grey and now green as the wind breathes over it.
+Below is a glen with a gleam of water, and some yards
+of tender lawn on either bank. Farmhouses line the
+sides, each with its dam, its few acres of untidy crop
+land, and its bower of trees. Beyond rise line upon
+line of green ridges, with a glimpse of woods and
+dwellings set far apart, till in the far distance the bold
+spurs of the Magaliesberg stand out against the sky.
+A thin trail of smoke from some veld-fire hangs between
+us and the mountains, tempering the intense
+clearness of an African prospect. There is something
+extraordinarily delicate and remote about the vista; it
+might be a mirage, did not the map bear witness to its
+reality. It is not unlike a child&rsquo;s conception of the
+landscape of Bunyan, a road running straight through
+a mystical green country, with the hilltops of the
+Delectable Mountains to cheer the pilgrim. And indeed
+the land is instinct with romance. The names of
+the gorges which break the mountain line&mdash;Olifants&rsquo;
+Poort, Crocodile Poort, Commando Nek&mdash;speak of
+war and adventure and the far tropics beyond these
+pastoral valleys. The little farms are all &ldquo;Rests&rdquo; and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Fountains,&rdquo; the true nomenclature of a far-wandering,
+home-loving people. The slender rivulet below us is
+one of the topmost branches of the great Limpopo,
+rising in a marsh in the wood behind, forcing its way
+through the hills and the bush-veld to the north,
+and travelling thence through jungles and fever-swamps
+to the Portuguese sea-coast. The road is one
+of the old highways of exploration; it is not fifty
+years since a white man first saw the place. And yet
+it is as pastoral as Yarrow or Exmoor; it has the
+green simplicity of sheep-walks and the homeliness of
+a long-settled rustic land. In the afternoon peace
+there is no hint of the foreign or the garish; it is as
+remote as Holland itself from the unwholesome splendours
+of the East and South.</p>
+
+<p>No landscape is so masterful as the veld. Broken
+up into valleys, reclaimed in parts by man, showing
+fifty varieties of scene, it yet preserves one essential
+character. For, homely as it is, it is likewise untamable.
+There are no fierce encroachments about it. A
+deserted garden does not return to the veld for many
+years, if ever. It is not, like the jungle, the natural
+enemy of man, waiting for a chance to enter and
+obliterate his handiwork, and repelled only by sleepless
+watching. Rather it is the quiet spectator of human
+efforts, ready to meet them half-way, and yet from its
+vastness always the dominant feature in any landscape.
+Its normal air is sad, grey, and Quakerish, never
+flamboyant under the brightest sun, and yet both
+strenuous and restful. The few red monstrosities man
+has built on its edge serve only to set off this essential
+dignity. For one thing, it is not created according to
+the scale of man. It will give him a home, but he will
+never alter its aspect. Let him plough and reap it
+for a thousand years, and he may beautify and fructify
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+but never change it. The face of England has altered
+materially in two centuries, because England is on a
+human scale,&mdash;a parterre land, without intrinsic wildness.
+But cultivation on the veld will always be
+superimposed: it will remain, like Egypt, ageless and
+immutable&mdash;one of the primeval types of the created
+world.</p>
+
+<p>But, though dominant, it is also adaptable. It can,
+for the moment, assume against its unchangeable
+background a chameleon-like variety. Sky and weather
+combine to make it imitative at times. Now, under
+a pale Italian sky, it is the Campagna&mdash;hot, airless,
+profoundly melancholy. Again, when the mist drives
+over it, and wet scarps of hill stand out among clouds,
+it is Dartmoor or Liddesdale; or on a radiant evening,
+when the mountains are one bank of hazy purple, it
+has borrowed from Skye and the far West Highlands.
+On a clear steely morning it has the air of its namesake,
+the Norwegian fjelds,&mdash;in one way the closest of
+its parallels. But each phase passes, the tantalising
+memory goes, and we are back again upon the aboriginal
+veld, so individual that we wonder whence arose
+the illusion.</p>
+
+<p>A modern is badly trained for appreciating certain
+kinds of scenery. Generations of poets and essayists
+have so stamped the &ldquo;pathetic fallacy&rdquo; upon his soul
+that wherever he goes, unless in the presence of a
+Niagara or a Mount Everest, he runs wild, looking for
+a human interest or a historical memory. This is well
+enough in the old settled lands, but on the veld it is
+curiously inept. The man who, in Emerson&rsquo;s phrase,
+seeks &ldquo;to impress his English whim upon the immutable
+past,&rdquo; will find little reward for his gymnastics. Not
+that there is no history of a kind&mdash;of Bantu wars, and
+great tribal immigrations, of wandering gold-seekers
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+and Portuguese adventurers, of the voortrekker and
+the heroic battles in the wilds. But the veld is so
+little subject to human life that had Thermopylæ
+been fought in yonder nek, or had Saint Francis
+wandered on this hillside, it would have mastered
+and obliterated the memories. It has its history;
+but it is the history of cosmic forces, of the cycle
+of seasons, of storms and suns and floods, the joys
+and sorrows of the natural world.</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Lo, for there among the flowers and grasses<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Only the mightier movement sounds and passes;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Only winds and rivers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Life and death.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Men dreamed of it and its wealth long ago in Portugal
+and Holland. They have quarrelled about it in
+London and Cape Town, fought for it, parcelled it
+out in maps, bought it and sold it. It has been
+subject for long to the lusts and hopes of man. It
+has been larded with epithets; town-bred folk have
+made theories about it; armies have rumbled across
+it; the flood of high politics has swept it. But the
+veld has no memory of it. Men go and come,
+kingdoms fall and rise, but it remains austere,
+secluded, impenetrable, &ldquo;the still unravished bride
+of quietness.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As one lives with it the thought arises, May not
+some future civilisation grow up here in keeping with
+the grave country? The basis of every civilisation
+is wealth&mdash;wealth to provide the background of
+leisure, which in turn is the basis of culture in a
+commercial world. Our colonial settlements have
+hitherto been fortuitous. They have fought a hard
+fight for a livelihood, and in the process missed the
+finer formative influences of the land. When, then,
+civilisation came it was naturally a borrowed one&mdash;English
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+with an accent. But here, as in the old
+Greek colonies, we begin <i>de novo</i>, and at a certain
+high plane of life. The Dutch, our forerunners,
+acquired the stamp of the soil, but they lived on
+the barest scale of existence, and were without the
+aptitude or the wealth to go farther. Our situation
+is different. We start rich, and with a prospect of
+growing richer. On one side are the mining centres&mdash;cosmopolitan,
+money-making, living at a strained
+pitch; on the other this silent country. The time
+will come when the rich man will leave the towns,
+and, as most of them are educated and all are able
+men, he will create for himself a leisured country
+life. His sons in turn will grow up with something
+autochthonous in their nature. For those who are
+truly South Africans at heart, and do not hurry to
+Europe to spend their wealth, there is a future, we
+may believe, of another kind than they contemplate.
+All great institutions are rooted and grounded in the
+soil. There is an art, a literature, a school of thought
+implicit here for the understanding heart,&mdash;no tarnished
+European importation, but the natural, spontaneous
+fruit of the land.</p>
+
+<p>As we descend into the glen the going underfoot
+grows softer, the flinty red clay changes to sand and
+soon to an irregular kind of turf. At last we are on
+the stream-bank, and the waving grasses have gone.
+Instead there is the true meadow growth, reeds and
+water-plants and a species of gorgeous scarlet buck-bean;
+little runnels from the farm-dams creep among
+the rushes, and soon our horses&rsquo; feet are squelching
+through a veritable bog. Here are the sights and
+sounds of a Hampshire water-meadow. Swallows
+skim over the pools; dragon-flies and bees brush
+past; one almost expects to see a great trout raise
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+a sleepy head from yonder shining reach. But there
+are no trout, alas! none, I fear, nearer than Natal;
+only a small greenish barbel who is a giant at four
+to the pound. The angler will get small satisfaction
+here, though on the Mooi River, above Potchefstroom,
+I have heard stories of a golden-scaled monster who
+will rise to a sea-trout fly. As we jump the little
+mill-lades, a perfect host of frogs are leaping in the
+grass, and small bright-eyed lizards slip off the stones
+at our approach. But, though the glen is quick with
+life, there is no sound: a deep Sabbatical calm broods
+over all things. The cry of a Kaffir driver from the
+highroad we have left breaks with an almost startling
+violence on the quiet. The tall reeds hush the stream&rsquo;s
+flow, the birds seem songless, even the hum of insects
+is curiously dim. There is nothing for the ear, but
+much for the eye and more for the nostril. Our ride
+has been through a treasure-house of sweet scents.
+First the pines and gum-trees; then the drowsy
+sweetness of the sunburnt veld; and now the more
+delicate flavour of rich soil and water and the sun-distilled
+essences of a thousand herbs. What the old
+Greek wrote of Arabia the Blessed might fitly be
+written here, &ldquo;From this country there is a smell
+wondrous sweet.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Lower down the glen narrows. The stream would
+be a torrent if there were more water; but the
+cascades are a mere trickle, and only the deep green
+rock-pools, the banks of shingle, and the worn foot of
+the cliff, show what this thread can grow to in the
+rains. A light wild brushwood begins, and creeps
+down to the very edge of the stream. Twenty years
+ago lions roamed in this scrub; now we see nothing
+but two poaching pariah dogs. We pass many little
+one-storeyed farms, each with a flower-garden run
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+to seed, and some acres of tangled crops. All are
+deserted. War has been here with its heavy hand,
+and a broken stoep, empty windows, and a tumbled-in
+roof are the marks of its passage. The owners may
+be anywhere&mdash;still on commando with Delarey, in
+Bermuda or Ceylon, in Europe, in camps of refuge, on
+parole in the towns. Great sunflowers, a foot in
+diameter, sprawl over the railings, dahlias and marigolds
+nod in the evening sunshine, and broken fruit-trees
+lean over the walks. Suddenly from the yard
+a huge aasvogel flaps out&mdash;the bird not of war but
+of unclean pillage. There is nothing royal in the
+creature, only obscene ferocity and a furtive greed. But
+its presence, as it rises high into the air, joined with
+the fallen rooftrees, effectively drives out Arcady from
+the scene. We feel we are in a shattered country.
+This quiet glen, which in peace might be a watered
+garden, becomes suddenly a desert. The veld is
+silent, but such secret nooks will blab their tale
+shamelessly to the passer-by.</p>
+
+<p>The stream bends northward in a more open valley,
+and as we climb the ridge we catch sight of the country
+beyond and the same august lines of mountain. But
+now there is a new feature in the landscape. Bushes
+are dotted over the far slope, and on the brow cluster
+together into something like a coppice. It is a
+patch of bush-veld, as rare on our high-veld as are
+fragments of the old Ettrick forest in Tweeddale.
+Two hundred miles north is the real bush-veld, full of
+game and fevers, the barrier between the tropical
+Limpopo and these grassy uplands. Seen in the
+splendour of evening there is a curious savagery about
+that little patch, which is neither veld nor woodland,
+but something dwarfish and uncanny. That is Africa,
+the Africa of travellers; but thus far we have ridden
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+through a countryside so homely and familiar that we
+are not prepared for a foreign intrusion. Which leads
+us to our hope of a new civilisation. If it ever comes,
+what an outlook it will have into the wilds! In England
+we look to the sea, in France across a frontier,
+even in Russia there is a mountain barrier between
+East and West. But here civilisation will march
+sharply with barbarism, like a castle of the Pale,
+looking over a river to a land of mists and outlaws.
+A man would have but to walk northward, out of the
+cities and clubs and the whole world of books and
+talk, to reach the country of the oldest earth-dwellers,
+the untamable heart of the continent. It is much for
+a civilisation to have its background&mdash;the Egyptian
+against the Ethiopian, Greek against Thracian, Rome
+against Gaul. It is also much for a race to have an
+outlook, a far horizon to which its fancy can turn.
+Even so strong men are knit and art is preserved from
+domesticity.</p>
+
+<p>We turn homeward over the long shoulders of hill,
+keeping to the track in the failing light. If the place
+is sober by day, it is transformed in the evening. For
+an hour the land sinks out of account, and the sky is
+the sole feature. No words can tell the tale of a veld
+sunset. Not the sun dipping behind the peaks of
+Jura, or flaming in the mouth of a Norwegian fiord, or
+sinking, a great ball of fire, in mid-Atlantic, has the
+amazing pageantry of these upland evenings. A flood
+of crimson descends on the world, rolling in tides from
+the flagrant west, and kindling bush and scaur and
+hill-top, till the land glows and pulsates in a riot of
+colour. And then slowly the splendour ebbs, lingering
+only to the west in a shoreless, magical sea. A delicate
+pearl-grey overspreads the sky, and the onlooker thinks
+that the spectacle is ended. It has but begun; for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+there succeed flushes of ineffable colour,&mdash;purple, rose-pink,
+tints of no mortal name,&mdash;each melting imperceptibly
+into the other, and revealing again the twilight
+world which the earlier pageant had obscured. Every
+feature in the landscape stands out with a tender,
+amethystine clearness. The mountain-ridge is cut
+like a jewel against the sky; the track is a ribbon of
+pure beaten gold. And then the light fades, the air
+becomes a soft mulberry haze, the first star pricks out
+in the blue, and night is come.</p>
+
+<p>Here is a virgin soil for art, if the art arises. In
+our modern history there is no true poetry of vastness
+and solitude. What there is is temperamental and
+introspective, not the simple interpretation of a natural
+fact. In the old world, indeed, there is no room for
+it: a tortured, crowded land may produce the aptitude,
+but it cannot give the experience. And the new lands
+have had no chance to realise their freshness: when
+their need for literature arose, they have taken it
+second-hand. The Australian poet sings of the bush
+in the rococo accents of Fleet Street, and when he is
+natural he can tell of simple human emotions, but not
+of the wilds. For the chance of the seeing eye has
+gone. He is not civilised but de-civilised, having
+borrowed the raiment of his elder brother. But, if
+South African conditions be as men believe, here we
+have a different prospect. The man who takes this
+country as his own will take it at another level than
+the pioneer. The veld will be to him more than a
+hunting-ground, and the seasons may be viewed from
+another than a commercial standpoint. If the art
+arises, it will be an austere art&mdash;with none of the
+fatuities of the picturesque, bare of false romance and
+preciosities, but essentially large, simple, and true. It
+will be the chronicle of the veld, the song of the cycle
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+of Nature, the epic of life and death, and &ldquo;the unimaginable
+touch of time.&rdquo; Who can say that from
+this land some dew of freshness may not descend
+upon a jaded literature, and the world be the richer
+by a new Wordsworth, a more humane Thoreau, or a
+manlier Senancour?</p>
+
+<p>Once more we are in the wood, now a ghostly place
+with dark aisles and the windless hush of evening in the
+branches. The flying ants are coming out of the ground
+for their short life of a night. The place is alive with
+wings, moths and strange insects, that go white and
+glimmering in the dusk. The clear darkness that
+precedes moonrise is over the earth, so that everything
+stands out clear in a kind of dark-green monochrome.
+Something of an antique dignity, like an evening of
+Claude Lorraine, is stealing into the landscape. Once
+more the veld is putting on an alien dress, till in
+this fairyland weather we forget our continent again.
+And yet who shall limit Africa to one aspect? Our
+whole ride has been a kaleidoscope of its many phases.
+Hot and sunburnt, dry grasses and little streams, the
+red rock and the fantastic sunset. And on the other
+side the quiet green valleys, the soothing vista of blue
+hills, the cool woods, the water-meadows, and the
+twilight. It is a land of contrasts&mdash;glimpses of
+desert and barbarism, memories of war, relics of old
+turmoil, and yet essentially a homeland. As the
+phrase goes, it is a &ldquo;white man&rsquo;s country&rdquo;; by
+which I understand a country not only capable of
+sustaining life, but fit for the amenities of life and the
+nursery of a nation. Whether it will rise to a nation
+or sink to a territory rests only with its people. But
+it is well to recognise its possibilities, to be in love
+with the place, for only then may we have the hope
+which can front and triumph over the many obstacles.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+The first darkness is passing, a faint golden light
+creeps up the sky, and suddenly over a crest comes
+the African moon, bathing the warm earth in its
+cold pure radiance. This moon, at any rate, is the
+peculiar possession of the land. At home it is a
+disc, a ball of light; but here it is a glowing world
+riding in the heavens, a veritable kingdom of fire.
+No virgin huntress could personify it, but rather
+some mighty warrior-god, driving his chariot among
+trampled stars. It lights us out of the wood, and
+on to the highroad, and then among the sunflowers
+and oleanders of the garden. The night air is cool
+and bracing, but soft as summer; and as we dismount
+our thoughts turn homeward, and we have a sudden
+regret. For in this month and at this hour in that
+other country we should be faring very differently.
+No dallying with zephyrs and sunsets; but the
+coming in, cold and weary, from the snowy hill, and
+telling over the peat-fire the unforgettable romance
+of winter sport.</p>
+
+<p class="date"><i>December 1901.</i></p>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+
+<h4>IN THE TRACKS OF WAR.</h4>
+
+<h5>I.</h5>
+
+<p>We left Klerksdorp in a dust-storm so thick and incessant
+that it was difficult to tell where the houses
+ended and the open country began. The little town,
+which may once have been a clean, smiling place, has
+been for months the <i>corpus vile</i> of military operations.
+A dozen columns have made it their destination; the
+transport and supplies of the whole Western Army
+have been congested there, with the result that the
+town lands have been rubbed bare of grass, the streets
+furrowed into dust-heaps, and the lightest breeze
+turned into a dust-tornado. Our Cape carts rattled
+over the bridge of the Schoon Spruit&mdash;&ldquo;Caller
+Water,&rdquo; as we might translate it in Scots, but here
+a low and muddy current between high banks&mdash;and,
+climbing a steep hill past the old town of Klerksdorp,
+came out of the fog into clearer veld, over which a
+gale of wind was blowing strongly. The desert was
+strewn with empty tins, which caught the sun like
+quartz; stands of barbed wire were everywhere on
+the broad uneven highway; little dust devils spouted
+at intervals on to the horizon. The place was like
+nothing so much as a large deserted brick-field in
+some Midland suburb.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+There is one feature of the high veld which has not
+had the attention it deserves&mdash;I mean the wind. Ask
+a man who has done three years&rsquo; trekking what he
+mostly complains of, and he will be silent about food
+and drink, the sun by day and the frost by night,
+but he is certain to break into picturesque language
+about the wind. The wind of winter blows not so
+unkindly as persistently. Day and night the cheek
+is flaming from its buffets. There is no shelter from
+scrub or kopje, for it is a most cunning wind, and
+will find a cranny to whistle through. Little wrinkles
+appear round blinking eyes, the voice gets a high
+pitch of protest, and a man begins to walk sideways
+like a crab to present the smallest surface to his
+enemy. And with the wind go all manner of tin-cans,
+trundling from one skyline to another with a
+most purposeful determination. Somewhere&mdash;S.S.W.
+I should put the direction&mdash;there must be a Land of
+Tin-cans, where in some sheltered valley all the
+<i>débris</i> of the veld has come to anchor.</p>
+
+<p>About ten o&rsquo;clock the wind abated a little, and the
+road passed into a country of low hills with a scrub of
+mimosa thorn along the flats. The bustard, which
+the Boers have so aptly named &ldquo;korhaan&rdquo; or scolding
+cock, strutted by the roadside, a few hawks circled
+about us, and an incurious secretary-bird flapped
+across our path. The first water appeared,&mdash;a melancholy
+stream called Rhenoster Spruit,&mdash;and the
+country grew hillier and greener till we outspanned
+for lunch at a farmhouse of some pretensions, with a
+large dam, a spruit, and a good patch of irrigated
+land. The owner had returned, and was dwelling in
+a tent against the restoration of his homestead. A
+considerable herd of cattle grazed promiscuously on
+the meadow, and the farmer with philosophic calm
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+was smoking his pipe in the shade. Apparently he
+was a man of substance, and above manual toil; for
+though he had been back for some time there was no
+sign of getting to work on repairs, such as we saw
+in smaller holdings. Fairly considered, this repatriation
+is a hard nut for the proud, indolent Boer,
+for it means the reversal of a life&rsquo;s order. His bywoners
+are scattered, his native boys refuse to return
+to him; there is nothing for the poor man to do but
+to take pick and hammer himself. Sooner or later he
+will do it, for in the last resort he is practical, but in
+the meantime he smokes and ponders on the mysteries
+of Providence and the odd chances of life.</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon our road lay through a pleasant
+undulating land, with green patches along the streams
+and tracts of bush relieving the monotony of the grey
+winter veld. Every farmhouse we passed was in the
+same condition,&mdash;roofless, windowless, dams broken,
+water-furrows choked, and orchards devastated. Our
+way of making war may be effective as war, but it
+inflicts terrible wounds upon the land. After a campaign
+of a dozen bloody fights reconstruction is
+simple; the groundwork remains for a new edifice.
+But, though the mortality be relatively small, our
+late methods have come very near to destroying the
+foundations of rural life. We have to build again
+from the beginning; we have to face questions of
+simple existence which seem strange to us, who in
+our complex society rarely catch sight of the bones of
+the social structure. To be sure there is hope. There
+is a wonderful recuperative power in the soil; the
+Boer is simpler in habits than most countrymen; and
+it is not a generation since he was starting at the
+same rudiments. Further, our own settlers will have
+the same beginnings, and there is a chance of rural
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+communities, Boer and British, being more thoroughly
+welded together, because they can advance <i>pari
+passu</i> from the same starting-point. But to the new-comer
+the situation has a baffling oddness. It seems
+strange to be doling out the necessaries of life to a
+whole community, to be dealing with a society which
+must have been full of shades and divisions like all
+rural societies, as a featureless collection of units.
+Yet it is probable that the Boers themselves are the
+last to realise it. The people who crowded to the
+doors of the ruined farms as we passed were on the
+whole good-humoured, patient, and uncomplaining.
+They had set about repairing the breaches in their
+fortunes, crudely but contentedly. At one farm we
+saw a curious Arcadian sight in this desert which war
+had made. Some small Boer children were herding a
+flock of sheep along a stream. A little girl in a sunbonnet
+was carrying a lamb; two brown, ragged,
+bare-legged boys were amusing themselves with a
+penny whistle. To the children war and reconstruction
+alike can only have been a game; and hope and
+the future are to the young.</p>
+
+<p>From Klerksdorp to Wolmaranstad the distance is
+some fifty miles, and it was almost nightfall before we
+descended with very weary cattle the long hill to our
+outspan. The country was one wide bare wold, the
+sky a soft glow of amber; and there was nothing
+between amber earth and amber sky save one solitary
+korhaan, scolding in the stillness. I do not know who
+the first Wolmarans may have been, but he built a
+stad very like a little Border town&mdash;all huddled together
+and rising suddenly out of the waste. The
+Makasi Spruit is merely a string of muddied water-holes,
+but in the darkness it might have been the
+&ldquo;wan water&rdquo; of Liddel or Yarrow. We camped in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+one of the few rooms that had still a roof, and rid
+ourselves of the dust of the road in an old outhouse
+in the company of a facetious monkey and a saturnine
+young eagle. When we had warmed ourselves and
+dined, I began to like Wolmaranstad, and, after a
+moonlight walk, I came to the conclusion that it was
+a most picturesque and charming town. But Wolmaranstad,
+like Melrose, should be seen by moonlight;
+for in the morning it looked little more than a collection
+of ugly shanties jumbled together in a dusty
+patch of veld.</p>
+
+
+<h5>II.</h5>
+
+<p>On the 12th of August, in the usual dust-storm, we
+started for Lichtenburg. There is no highroad, but a
+series of wild cross-country paths merging constantly
+in farm-roads. No map is quite reliable, and local
+information is fallacious. The day being the festival
+of St Grouse, we shot conscientiously all morning with
+very poor success. The game was chiefly korhaan,
+and he is a hard bird to get on terms with. About
+the size of a blackcock, and as slow on the wing, he
+looks an easy mark; but if stalked, he has a habit of
+rising just out of range, and repeating the performance
+till he has lured you a mile from your waggon,
+when he squawks in triumph and departs into the
+void. The orthodox way is to ride round him in
+slowly narrowing circles&mdash;a ruse which seems to
+baffle his otherwise alert intelligence. The country
+was rolling veld dotted with wait-a-bit thorn-bushes;
+the farmhouses few but large; the roads heavy with
+sand. In one hill-top farm, well named Uitkyk, we
+found an old farmer and his son-in-law, who invited
+us to enter. The place was in fair order, being out of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+the track of columns, tolerably furnished, and with
+the usual portrait of the Reverend Andrew Murray
+on the wall. The farmer had no complaints to make,
+being well-to-do and too old to worry about earthly
+things; but the son-in-law, a carpenter by trade, was
+full of his grievances. The neighbourhood, being in
+ruins, was crying for his services, he said, but there
+was no material in the country to work with. Building
+material was scarce in Johannesburg and Pretoria;
+how much scarcer it must be in Wolmaranstad! This
+just complaint was frequent on our journey; for the
+Transvaal, served by its narrow-gauge single-line railways
+choked with military traffic, is badly equipped
+with the necessaries of reconstruction, and many willing
+workmen have to kick their heels in idleness.</p>
+
+<p>We outspanned at midday near some pools of indifferent
+water, which our authorities had enthusiastically
+described as an abundant water-supply.
+There was a roofless farm close by, where a kind
+of hut of biscuit-tins had been erected, in which a
+taciturn young woman was nursing a child. There
+was also a boy of about sixteen in the place who had
+coffee with us, and took us afterwards to stalk korhaan
+with a rifle. He was newly home from commando,
+full of spirit and good-humour, and handled
+longingly the rifle which the law forbade him to
+possess. All afternoon we passed roofless farmhouses
+crowded with women and children, and in
+most cases the farmer was getting forward in the
+work of restoration. Dams and water-furrows were
+being mended, some kind of roof put on the house,
+waggons cobbled together, and in many cases a good
+deal of ploughing had been done. The country grew
+bleaker as we advanced, trees disappeared, huge wind-swept
+downs fell away on each side of the path, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+heavy rain-clouds came up from the west. The real
+rains begin in October, but chill showers often make
+their appearance in August, and I know nothing more
+desolate than the veld in such a storm. By-and-by
+we struck the path of a column, ploughed up by heavy
+gun-carriages, and in following the track somehow
+missed our proper road. The darkness came while
+we were yet far from our outspan, crawling up a great
+hill, which seemed endless. At the top a fine sight
+awaited us, for the whole country in front seemed on
+fire. A low line of hills was tipped with flame, and
+the racing fires were sweeping into the flats with the
+solid regularity of battalions. A moment before, and
+we had been in Shelley&rsquo;s</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Wide, grey, lampless, deep, unpeopled world&rdquo;;<br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>now we were in the midst of light and colour and
+elfish merriment. To me there is nothing solemn in
+a veld-fire&mdash;nothing but madness and fantasy. The
+veld, so full at other times of its own sadness, the</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Acerbo indegno mistero della cose,&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>becomes demented, and cries an impish defiance to
+the austere kings who sit in Orion. The sight raised
+our spirits, and we stumbled down the long hillside
+in a better temper. By-and-by a house of a sort
+appeared in the valley bottom, and a dog&rsquo;s bark
+told us that it was inhabited. To our relief we
+found that we had actually struck our outspan,
+Korannafontein, having approached it from the opposite
+side. The Koranna have long since gone from
+it, and the sole inhabitant was a Jew storekeeper,
+a friendly person, who assisted us to doctor our very
+weary horses. The ways of the Jew are past all
+finding out. Refuse to grant him a permit for himself
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+and goods, and he says nothing; but he is in
+occupation months before the Gentile, unless that
+Gentile comes from Aberdeen. Our friend had his
+store stocked, and where he got the transport no
+man knows. He spoke well of the neighbourhood,
+both of Boer and native. The natives here, he said,
+are civilised. I asked him his definition of civilisation.
+&ldquo;They speak Dutch,&rdquo; he said,&mdash;an answer
+worth recording. We camped for the night behind
+what had once been the wool-shed. The floor of the
+tent was dirty, and, foolishly, I sent a boy to &ldquo;mak
+skoon.&rdquo; He made &ldquo;skoon&rdquo; by digging up dust
+with a shovel and storing it in heaps in different
+corners. About midnight the rain fell heavily, and
+a little later a great wind rose and put those dust-heaps
+in circulation. I awoke from dreams of salmon-fishing
+with a profound conviction that I had been
+buried under a landslip. I crawled hastily through
+a flap followed by a stream of dust, and no ventilation
+could make that tent habitable, so that in the
+morning we awoke with faces like colliers, and
+throats as dry as the nether millstone.</p>
+
+<p>From Korannafontein to Lichtenburg is something
+over forty miles, so we started at daybreak and
+breakfasted at a place called Rhenosterput, where
+some gentleman sent a Mauser bullet over our heads
+to remind us of his presence. The country was downland,
+very full of Namaqua partridge and the graceful
+spur-winged plover, a ranching country, for the streams
+had little fall and less water. At midday we outspanned
+at a pretty native village called Rooijantjesfontein,
+with a large church after the English village
+pattern, and a big dam lined with poplars. The life
+of a commercial missionary, who bought a farm when
+land was cheap and had it cultivated by his congregation,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+is a pleasant one: he makes a large profit,
+spends easy days, and returns early to his native
+Germany. It is a type I have little patience with,
+for it discredits one of the most heroic of human
+callings, and turns loose on society the slim Christian
+native, who brings Christianity and civilisation alike
+into discredit. We were now out of the region of
+tracks and on the main road to Lichtenburg, and all
+afternoon we travelled across the broad shallow basin
+of the Hartz River with our goal full in view on
+a distant hill-top. Far off on our right we saw a
+curious sight&mdash;a funeral waggon with a train of
+mourners creeping slowly across the veld. The
+Boers, as we heard from many sources, are exhuming
+the dead from different battle-fields, and bringing
+them, often from great distances, to the graveyards
+on their own homesteads. An odd sombre task, not
+without its grandeur; for to the veld farmer, as to
+the old Roman, there are Lares and Penates, and
+he wishes at the last to gather all his folk around
+him.</p>
+
+
+<h5>III.</h5>
+
+<p>Lichtenburg, as I have said, stands on a hill-top,
+but when one enters he finds a perfect model of a
+Dutch village. The streets are lined with willows
+and poplars, and seamed with water-furrows, and all
+the principal buildings surround a broad village green
+on which cattle were grazing. Seen in the morning
+it lost nothing of its attractiveness; and it dwells
+in my memory as a fresh clean place, looking over
+a wide upland country,&mdash;a place where men might
+lead honest lives, and meet the world fearlessly. It
+has its own relics of war. The court-house roof and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+walls are splashed with bullets, relics of Delarey&rsquo;s
+fight with the Northumberland Fusileers. General
+Delarey is himself the principal inhabitant. He owns
+much land in the neighbourhood, and his house stands
+a few miles out on the Mafeking road. From this
+district was drawn all that was most chivalrous and
+resolute in the Boer forces; and the name of their
+leader is still a synonym with lovers of good fighting
+men for the finest quality of his race.</p>
+
+<p>The Zeerust road is as bad going for waggons as
+I have ever seen. It runs for miles through a desert
+where the soil is as black as in Lancashire, and a
+kind of coaly dust rises in everlasting clouds. We
+started late in the day, so that sunset found us
+some distance from water, in a featureless country.
+We were to outspan at the famous Malmani Oog&mdash;the
+eye of the Malmani; but a fountainhead is not
+a good goal on a dark night to ignorant travellers.
+Shortly after dusk we rode on ahead to look for the
+stream. Low slopes of hills rose on all sides, but
+nowhere could we see a gleam or a hollow which
+might be water. The distance may have been short,
+but to a hungry and thirsty man it seemed endless,
+as one hill after another was topped without any
+result. We found a fork in the road, and took the
+turn to the left as being more our idea of the way.
+As it happened we were trekking straight for the
+Kalahari Desert, and but for the lucky sound of a
+waggon on the other road might have been floundering
+there to-day. We turned aside to ask for information,
+and found we were all but at the Oog, which
+lay in the trees a hundred yards off. The owner of
+the waggon was returning to Lichtenburg with a sick
+wife, whom he had taken to Zeerust for a change. He
+had been a road surveyor under the late Government,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+had served on Delarey&rsquo;s staff, and had been taken
+prisoner. A quiet reserved man with dignified manners,
+he answered our questions without complaint or
+petulance. There is something noble in travel when
+pursued in this stately leisure. The great buck-waggon,
+the sixteen solemn oxen lumbering on, the master
+walking behind in the moonlight, have an air of patriarchal
+dignity, an elder simplicity. I suppose fifteen
+to twenty miles might be a good day&rsquo;s march, but
+who shall measure value by miles? It is the life for
+dreams, for roadside fires, nights under the stars, new
+faces studied at leisure, good country talk, and the
+long thoughts of an unharassed soul. Let us by all
+means be up and doing, setting the world to rights
+and sounding our own trumpet; but is the most successful
+wholly at ease in the presence of great mountains
+and forests, or men whose lives share in the calm
+cycle of nature?</p>
+
+<p>The night in tents was bitterly cold, and the morning
+bath, taken before sunrise in the springs of Malmani,
+was the most Arctic experience I have ever met.
+We left our drivers to inspan and follow, and set off
+down the little stream with our guns. There are
+hours which live for ever in the memory&mdash;hours of
+intense physical exhilaration, the pure wine of health
+and youth, when the mind has no thoughts save for
+the loveliness of earth, and the winds of morning stir
+the blood to a heavenly fervour. No man who has
+experienced such seasons can be other than an optimist.
+Dull nights in cities, heartless labours with pen
+and ink, the squalid worries of business and ambition,
+all are forgotten, and in the retrospect it is those hours
+which stand up like shining hill-tops&mdash;the type of the
+pure world before our sad mortality had laid its spell
+upon it. It is not pleasure&mdash;the word is too debased
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+in human parlance; nor happiness, for that is for calm
+delights. Call it joy, that &ldquo;enthusiasm&rdquo; which is
+now the perquisite of creeds and factions, but which of
+old belonged to the fauns and nymphs who followed
+Pan&rsquo;s piping in the woody hollows of Thessaly. I
+have known and loved many streams, but the little
+Malmani has a high place in my affections. The
+crystal water flowed out of great reed-beds into a
+shallow vale, where it wound in pools and cataracts to
+a broad ford below a ruined mill. Thence it passed
+again into reed-beds fringed with willows and departed
+from our ken. There was a bamboo covert opposite
+full of small singing birds; the cries of snipe and plover
+rose from the reed-beds, and the fall of water, rarest of
+South African sounds, tinkled like steel in the cold
+morning air. We shot nothing, for we saw nothing;
+the glory of the scene was all that mortal eye could
+hold at once. And then our waggons splashed through
+the ford, and we had perforce to leave it.</p>
+
+<p>We took a hill road, avoiding the detour by Malmani
+Drift, and after some hours in a country of
+wooded glens, came into the broad valley of the Klein
+Marico. The high veld and its scenery had been left
+far behind. Something half tropical, even in this mid-winter,
+was in the air of those rich lowlands. After
+the bleak uplands of Lichtenburg it was pleasant to
+see good timber, the green of winter crops, and abundant
+runnels of water. The farm-houses were larger
+and in fair repair,&mdash;embowered, too, in orange-groves,
+with the golden fruit bright among the glossy leaves.
+Blossom was appearing in every orchard; new and
+strange birds took the place of our enemy the korhaan;
+and for the first time on our journey we saw buck on
+the slopes. The vale was ringed with stony tree-clad
+hills like the Riviera, and in the hot windless noon the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+dust hung in clouds about us, so that, in spite of water
+and greenery, my impression of that valley is one of
+thirst and discomfort. Zeerust<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> is a pretty village
+close under the hills, with tree-lined streets,&mdash;a prosperous
+sleepy place, with no marks of the ravages of
+war. The farmers, too, are a different stock from the
+high-veld Boers; they get their living more easily, and
+in their swarthy faces and slouching walk one cannot
+read the hard-bitten spirit which inspired the men of
+Botha and Delarey. They seemed on good terms with
+their new masters. We attended a gymkhana given
+by the South African Constabulary, and the Dutch
+element easily predominated in the crowd which
+watched the races. A good-humoured element, too,
+for the men smoked and criticised the performances in
+all friendliness, while their womenkind in their Sunday
+clothes thronged to the marquees for tea.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a>
+Zeerust is a type of the curious truncated Boer nomenclature, being
+a corruption of Coetzee&rsquo;s Rust.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h5>IV.</h5>
+
+<p>The Rustenburg road runs due east through a fine
+defile called Klein Marico Poort, and thence in a
+country of thick bush for twenty miles to the ford of
+the Groot Marico. We started before dawn, and did
+not halt for breakfast till the said ford, by which time
+the sun was high in the heavens and we were very hot,
+dusty, and hungry. Lofty wooded hills rose to the
+north, and not forty miles off lay the true hunting-veld,
+with koodoo, water-buck, and hippopotamus. Bird
+life was rich along the road&mdash;blue jays, rollers, and the
+handsome malicious game-bird which acts as scout to
+the guinea-fowl, and with his harsh call informs them
+of human presence. The farms were small and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+richly watered, with laden orange-groves and wide
+ruined verandahs. The people of Zeerust had spoken
+with tears in their eyes of the beautiful condition of
+this road, but we found it by far the worst in our
+travels. It lay deep in sand, was strewn with ugly
+boulders, and at one ford was so impossible that we
+had to make a long detour over virgin veld. The
+Great Marico, which, like all streams in the northern
+watershed, joins the Limpopo, and indeed forms its
+chief feeder, is a muddy tropical water, very unlike
+the clear Malmani. Beyond it the country becomes
+bare and pastoral again, full of little farms, to which
+the bulk of the inhabitants had returned. It was the
+most smiling country we had seen, for bush-veld has
+an ineradicable air of barbarism, but a green open land
+with white homesteads among trees is the true type
+of a settled country. Apricot blossom lay like a soft
+haze on the landscape. The young grass was already
+springing in the sheltered places, the cold dusty winds
+had gone, and a forehint of spring was in the calm
+evening.</p>
+
+<p>We spent the night above the Elands River, a very
+beautiful full water, almost on the site of the battle.
+The Elands River fight seems to have slipped from
+the memory of a people who made much of lesser
+performances; but to soldiers it is easily the Thermopylæ
+of the war. Five hundred or so of Australians
+of different regiments, with a few Rhodesians, were
+marching to join another force, when they were cut
+off at Elands River by 3000 Boers. They were invited
+to surrender, and declined. A small number took up
+a position beside the stream; the remainder held a
+little ridge in the centre of the amphitheatre of hills.
+For several days they toiled at dug-outs&mdash;terrible
+days, for they were shelled continually from the whole
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+rim of the amphitheatre. One relieving force from
+the west retired in despair; a relieving force from the
+east was deceived by false heliograms, and went away,
+believing the work accomplished. Then came the
+report that they had surrendered; and then, after
+some fifteen days, they were found by Lord Kitchener,
+still holding the forlorn post. It was a mere sideshow,
+but to have been there was worth half the
+clasps in the campaign. More shells were fired into
+that little place than into Mafeking, and the courage
+of the few by the river who passed up water in the
+night to their comrades is beyond praise. The Colonials
+will long remember Elands River. It was their own
+show: without generalship or orders, against all the
+easy traditions of civilised warfare, the small band
+followed the Berserker maxim, and vindicated the
+ancient dignity of arms. In the morning we went
+over the place. The dug-outs were still mostly intact,
+and in a little graveyard beneath rude crosses slept
+the heroic dead.</p>
+
+<p>A few miles farther on and the summit of a ridge
+was reached, from which the eye looked over a level
+valley to the superb western line of the Magaliesberg.
+Straight in front was the cleft of Magata&rsquo;s Nek,
+beyond which Rustenburg lay. The western Magaliesberg
+disappoints on closer acquaintance. The cliffs
+prove to be mere loose kranzes, the glens are waterless,
+the woods are nothing but barren thorn. But
+seen from afar in the clear air of dawn, when the
+darkness is still lurking in the hollows and the blue
+peaks are flushed with sunrise, it is a fairyland picture,
+a true mountain barrier to an enchanted land. Our
+road swung down a long slope to the Coster River,
+where we outspanned, and then through a sandy
+wilderness to the drift of the Selons. From this it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+climbed wearily up to the throat of the nek, a dull
+tract of country with few farms and no beauties. The
+nek, too, on closer view has little to commend it, save
+the prospect that opens on the other side. The level
+green plateau of Rustenburg lay before us, bounded
+on the north by a chain of kopjes, and on the south
+by the long dark flanks of the Magaliesberg as it
+sweeps round to the east. A few miles and the village
+itself came in sight, with a great church, as at
+Wakkerstroom, standing up like some simple rural
+cathedral over the little houses. Rustenburg was
+always the stronghold of the straitest sect of the
+Boers; and in the midst of the half-tropical country
+around, this sweep of pasture, crowned with a white
+kirk, had something austere and Puritan in its air,&mdash;the
+abode of a people with their own firm traditions,
+hostile and masterful towards the world. The voortrekker
+having fought his way through the Magaliesberg
+passes, outspanned his tired oxen on this pleasant
+upland, and called it his &ldquo;city of rest.&rdquo; And it still
+looks its name, for no orchards and gardens can make
+it otherwise than a novelty in the landscape&mdash;sober,
+homely, and comforting, like some Old Testament
+Elam where there were twelve wells of water
+and three-score and ten palm-trees, or the &ldquo;plain
+called Ease&rdquo; wherein Christian &ldquo;walked with much
+content.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<h5>V.</h5>
+
+<p>We took up our quarters at a farm a little way
+south of the town in the very shadow of the
+mountains. It was a long, low, rambling house
+called Boschdaal, with thick walls and cool passages.
+All around were noble gum-trees; a clear stream
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+ran through the garden, which even at this season
+was gay with tropical flowers; and the orchard was
+heavy with oranges, lemons, and bananas. A little
+conical hill behind had a path made to its summit,
+whence one had a wide prospect of the Magaliesberg
+and the whole plateau. There were sheer cliffs in
+the background, with a waterfall among them; and
+between them and the house were some miles of
+park-like country where buck came in the morning.
+The rooms were simply but pleasantly furnished; the
+walls a forest of horns; and the bookcases full of
+European classics, with a great abundance of German
+story-books for children, telling how wicked Gretchen
+amended her ways, or little Hans saved his pennies.
+Altogether a charming dwelling-place, where a man
+might well spend his days in worthy leisure, shooting,
+farming, gardening, and smoking his pipe in the
+evening, with the sunset flaming over the hills.</p>
+
+<p>We spent two nights in Rustenburg, visiting in the
+daytime a horse depot to which a number of brood
+mares had been brought for winter grazing, and
+paying our respects to a neighbouring chief, Magata,
+who lives in a <i>stad</i> from which many town councils
+might learn a lesson of cleanliness and order. The
+natives are as rich as Jews from the war, owning fine
+spans of oxen and Army Service Corps waggons, and
+altogether disinclined to stir themselves for wages.
+This prosperity of the lower race must be a bitter pill
+for the Boer to swallow, as he drives in for his rations
+with a team of wretched donkeys, and sees his former
+servants with buck-waggons and cattle. We watched
+strings of Burghers arriving at the depot, and at night
+several fires in the neighbouring fields told of their
+outspans. Most of them were polite and communicative:
+a very few did their business in sulky silence.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+There was one man who took my fancy. Originally
+he must have been nearly seven feet high, but a
+wound in the back had bent him double. He had
+long black hair, and sombre black eyes which looked
+straight before him into vacancy. He had a ramshackle
+home-made cart and eight donkeys, and a
+gigantic whip, of which he was a consummate master.
+A small boy did his business for him, while he sat
+hunched up on his cart speaking hoarsely to his
+animals, and cracking his whip in the air,&mdash;a man
+for whom the foundations of the world had been upset,
+and henceforth, like Cain, a dweller apart.</p>
+
+<p>On the third morning we started regretfully, for
+Pretoria was only two days distant. This was the
+pleasantest stage in our journey: the air was cool and
+fine, the roads good, water abundant, and a noble
+range of mountains kept us company. This is the
+tobacco-land of the Transvaal, whence comes the
+Magaliesberg brand, which has a high reputation in
+South Africa. There are no big farms but a great
+number of small holdings, richly irrigated and populous&mdash;the
+stronghold of Mr Kruger in former times, for
+he could always whistle his Rustenburgers to his will.
+Now and then a pass cleft the mountain line on our
+right, and in the afternoon we came in sight of the
+great gap through which the Crocodile River forces
+its passage. Farther east, and at a higher altitude,
+lay Silikat&rsquo;s Nek, which is called after Mosilikatse.
+It was approaching sunset as we crossed Commando
+Nek, which is divided from Crocodile Poort by a spur
+of mountain, and looked over the Witwatersberg
+rolling south to the Rand and the feverish life of
+cities. High up on a peak stood a castellated blockhouse,
+looking like a peel tower in some old twilight
+of Northumbrian hills, and to the left and right the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+precipitous cliffs of the Magaliesberg ran out to the
+horizon. At the foot of the pass we forded the
+Magalies River, a stream of clear water running over
+a bed of grey-blue stones, and in another half-hour
+we had crossed the bridge of the Crocodile and outspanned
+on the farther bank.</p>
+
+<p>The rivers unite a mile away, and the cleft of the
+Poort to which the twin streams hurried stood out as
+black as ink in the moonlight. Far up on the hillside
+the bush was burning, and the glare made the gorge
+like the gate of a mysterious world, guarded by flames
+and shadows. This Poort is fine by daylight, but still
+not more than an ordinary pass; but in the witching
+half-light it dominated the mind like a wild dream.
+After dinner we set out over the rough ground to
+where a cliff sank sheer from the moonlight into utter
+blackness. We heard the different notes of the two
+rivers&mdash;the rapid Magalies and the sedater Crocodile;
+and then we came to the bank of the united stream,
+and scrambling along it found ourselves in the throat
+of the pass. High walls of naked rock rose on either
+hand, and at last, after some hard walking, we saw a
+space of clear star-sown sky and the land beyond the
+mountains. I had expected a brawling torrent; instead,
+I found a long dark lagoon sleeping between
+the sheer sides. In the profound silence the place
+had the air of some underground world. The black
+waters seemed to have drowsed there since the
+Creation, unfathomably deep&mdash;a witch&rsquo;s caldron, where
+the savage spirits of the hills might show their faces.
+Even as we gazed the moon came over the crest: the
+cliff in front sprang into a dazzling whiteness which
+shimmered back from the lagoon below. Far up on
+the summit was a great boulder which had a far-away
+likeness to an august human head. As the light fell
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+on it the resemblance became a certainty: there were
+the long locks, the heavy brows, the profound eyes of
+a colossal Jove. Not Jove indeed, for he was the god
+of a race, but that elder deity of the natural man,
+grey-haired Saturn, keeping his ageless vigil, quiet as
+a stone, over the generations of his children. Forgotten
+earth-dwellers, Mosilikatse and his chiefs, Boer
+commandos, British yeomanry,&mdash;all had passed before
+those passionless eyes, as their successors will pass and
+be forgotten. And in the sense of man&rsquo;s littleness
+there is comfort, for it is part of the title of our inheritance.
+The veld and the mountains continue for
+ever, austerely impartial to their human occupants:
+it is for the new-comer to prove his right to endure by
+the qualities which nature has marked for endurance.</p>
+
+<p class="date"><i>August 1902.</i></p>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE WOOD BUSH.</h4>
+
+<p>Some thirty miles east of Pietersburg, the most
+northerly railway station in the Transvaal, the Leydsdorp
+coach, which once a-week imperils the traveller&rsquo;s
+life, climbs laboriously into a nest of mountains, and
+on the summit enters an upland plateau, with shallow
+valleys and green forest-clad slopes. Twenty miles on
+and the same coach, if it has thus far escaped destruction,
+precipitously descends a mountain-side into the
+fever flats which line the Groot Letaba and the Letsitela.
+The Leydsdorp road thus cuts off a segment of
+a great irregular oblong, which is bounded on the
+south by the spurs of the Drakensberg, which the Boers
+call the Wolkberg or Mountain of Cloud, and on the
+north divided by the valley of the Klein Letaba from
+the Spelonken. It is a type of country found in
+patches in the de Kaap mountains, and in parts of
+Lydenburg; but here it exists in a completely defined
+territory of perhaps 700 square miles, divided sharply
+from high veld and bush veld. The average elevation
+may be 5000 feet, and, though cut up into valleys
+and ridges, it preserves the attributes of a tableland,
+so that on all sides one can journey to an edge and
+look down upon a wholly different land. But the geographical
+is the least of its distinctions. The climate
+has none of the high-veld dryness or the low-veld
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+closeness, but is humid and sharp and wholesome all
+the year round. Mists and cool rains abound, every
+hollow has its stream, and yet frost is rarely known.
+Its vegetation, the configuration of its landscape, the
+soil itself, are all things by themselves in South Africa.
+Fever, horse-sickness, and most cattle diseases are unknown.
+It is little explored, for till quite lately the
+native tribes were troublesome, and only the poorer
+class of Boer squatted on its occupation farms, and,
+though a proclaimed gold-field for some years, the
+uitlander who strayed there had rarely an eye for its
+beauty. The unfortunate man who took his life in his
+hands and journeyed by coach to Leydsdorp forgot the
+landscape in the perils of the journey, and in all likelihood
+forgot most things in fever at the end of it. It
+remained, therefore, a paradise with a few devotees, a
+place secret and strange, with a beauty so peculiar that
+the people who tried to describe it were rarely believed.
+A delight in the Wood Bush is apt to spoil a man for
+other scenery. The high veld seems tame and monotonous,
+the bush veld an intolerable desert, and even
+the mountain glories of the Drakensberg something
+crude and barbarous after this soft, rich, and fascinating
+garden-land.</p>
+
+<p>The mountains come into view a little way from
+Pietersburg, but there are many miles of featureless
+high veld to be covered before the foothills are reached.
+It was midsummer when I first travelled there, and
+the dusty waterless plains were glazed by the hot
+sun. The Sand River, filled with acres of fine sand,
+but not a drop of moisture, was not a cooling object
+in the scene, and the dusty thorn scrub offered no
+shade. But insensibly the country changed. Bold
+kopjes of rose-red granite appeared on the plain, and
+at a place called Kleinfontein the road turned sharply
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+south, and we were confronted with a noble line of
+crags running out like a buttress from the mountains.
+At Smith&rsquo;s Drift the road swerved east again, and a
+long valley appeared before us running up into the
+heart of the hills. A clear stream came down it, and
+the sides were dotted in bush-veld manner with redwood
+and sikkelboom and syringa, and a variety of
+thorns, of which the Kaffir waak-en-beetje and the
+knopjes-doorn were the prettiest. Occasionally the
+dull green of the olivienhout appeared, and when the
+bush ceased aloes raised their heads among the rocks.
+Everywhere the mimosa was in bloom, and the afternoon
+air was laden with a scent like limes. Towards
+the top the valley flattened out into upland meadows,
+little farms appeared dotted on the hillsides, and the
+yellow mimosa blossom on the slopes was so indistinguishable
+from gorse that in the half-light I could
+have sworn I was among Cumberland fells, and not
+on the edge of the tropics and 300 miles from the sea.
+We assisted a Boer farmer to slay a pig, had coffee
+afterwards with his family, and slept the sleep of the
+just on a singularly hard piece of ground under a
+magnificent sky of stars, being roused once to give a
+drink to a belated member of the S.A.C.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after dawn next day we toiled to the top
+of a long hill, and entered the Wood Bush. A high
+blue ridge&mdash;the Iron Crown mountain behind Haenertsburg&mdash;rose
+before us, which changed with the
+full light to a dazzling green, studded in the kloofs
+with patches of dark forest. Glimpses of other forest-crowned
+hills appeared in the turnings of the path;
+and when we had exhausted the horizon we had time
+to look at the roadside. It was a perfectly new
+country. The soil was as red as Devonshire, the
+steep sides oozed with little runnels of water. Thickly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+grassed meadows of the same dazzling yet delicate
+green fell away to the little hollows, where copses
+took their place, and now and then a small red farm
+showed in a group of alien gum-trees. It was so
+novel as to be almost unbelievable. And then in the
+meadows little shrubs like dwarf hazels appeared,
+which on closer view showed themselves as tree-ferns,&mdash;old
+gnarled veterans and young graceful saplings.
+The herbage, too, was gay with flowers, as gay as an
+English meadow save that for daisies there were
+patches of tall arums and lilies, and for buttercups a
+superb golden-belled campanula. I am no botanist
+and am not ashamed of it, but on that morning I
+regretted a wasted youth and many unprofitable
+hours given to the classics. By-and-by we descended
+on the little township of Haenertsburg, a cluster of
+rondhavels and the tents of an S.A.C. post. On leaving
+we crossed a torrent, the Bruderstroom, which
+later becomes the Groot Letaba and flows through
+miles of feverish deserts to join the Olifants and
+thence to the Limpopo. It was a true highland
+stream, with deep dark-blue pools, and great swirls
+of icy grey water sweeping round crags or stretching
+out into glistening shallows. On the high veld it
+would be dignified by the name of river, and be shorn
+and parcelled into a thousand water-furrows. But
+here it was but one of many, for every hollow had its
+limpid stream slipping out of sight among the tall
+grasses.</p>
+
+<p>Beyond Haenertsburg the Iron Crown mountain
+comes into full view, with its green sides scarred and
+blackened in places with the works of gold-seekers.
+To the left rose the crags of the Wolkberg, and far
+behind the blue lines of the Drakensberg itself. To
+the north the true Wood Bush country appeared, an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+endless park laid out as if by a landscape gardener,
+with broad dales set with coppices, and little wood-covered
+hills. &ldquo;A park-like country,&rdquo; is the common
+travellers&rsquo; phrase for the bush veld; but there the
+grass is rank and ugly, the trees isolated thorns, and
+the whole land flat and waterless. Here was a true
+park, like Chatsworth or Windsor, so perfectly laid
+out that one could scarcely believe that it was not a
+work of man. For surely a park is properly man&rsquo;s
+work, a flower of civilisation, which nature aids but
+rarely contrives. Yet when she does contrive, how
+far is the result beyond our human skill! For an
+exception the mountain-tops were free from mist;
+the land lay bathed in a cool morning light, and
+the scent of a thousand aromatic herbs&mdash;wormwood,
+southernwood, a glorified bog-myrtle, musk, and peppermint&mdash;rose
+from the wayside. Bracken was as
+plentiful as on a Scots moor, and the old familiar
+fragrance was like a breath of the sea. We breakfasted
+in a water-meadow, where a spring of cold
+water stole away through a forest of tree-ferns,
+arums, giant orchises, and the tall blue agapanthus.
+As we smoked our morning pipes and watched a
+white eagle and a brace of berghaans circling in the
+blue, I vowed that here at last had been found the
+true Hesperides.</p>
+
+<p>A few miles on and we were on the farther edge.
+At a place called Skellum Kloof the road dips sharply
+over the crest, and down three break-neck miles to
+the Groot Letaba. Behind lay the green garden-land;
+in front, a hundred miles of broken country, fading
+in the far distance into misty flats. The little range of
+the Murchison hills ran out at right angles; away to
+the north the peaks of Majajie&rsquo;s mountains, with the
+Spelonken beyond, blocked the horizon. As far as the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+eye could see, the faint blue line of the Rooi Rand,
+the Portuguese border, was just distinguishable from
+the sky, with the fingers of the little Lebombo breaking
+the thin line to the south. One forgot the weary
+miles of swamp and fever that lay between, and saw
+only a glorious sunlit plain, which might have been
+full of clear rivers and vineyards and white cities,
+instead of thorn and Kaffir huts and a few ugly mining
+shanties. The Wood Bush on its eastern side is a
+series of soft green folds, with the superb evergreen
+forest in every kloof. At first sight the woods look
+like hazel copses, and you plunge gaily in to your disaster.
+Below Skellum Kloof is a little wooded glen,
+into which I descended for water, and at one time
+there were doubts of my ever emerging again. The
+place was matted with monkey-creepers, mosses, huge
+ferns, and a thick undergrowth around the trunks
+of great trees. Yellowwoods, 200 feet high, essenwood,
+sneezewood, stinkwood, most of them valuable
+timber-trees, and all with a glossy dark foliage, rose
+out of the jungle to the confusion of the poor inhabitant
+below. I noticed some giant royals, some
+curious orchids, and quantities of maidenhair fern and
+the graceful asparagus creeper. But soon I noticed
+little beyond the exceeding toilsomeness of the passage.
+Every step had to be fought for, the place was
+hot to suffocation, and I was in mortal fear of snakes.
+Also, I had no desire to meet a bushbuck ram, than
+whom no fiercer fellow for his size exists, at close
+quarters in his native haunts. I kept down-hill,
+listening for water, and by-and-by rolled over a red
+scaur into an ice-cold pool, which was the only pleasing
+thing in the forest. Happily in returning I struck a
+native path, and reached open country in greater
+comfort. Two boys who had been sent to find me&mdash;Basutos,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+and, like all Basutos, fools in a thick wood&mdash;
+succeeded in getting lost themselves, and had to be
+searched for.</p>
+
+<p>Hereabouts, when my ship comes home, I shall
+have my country house. There is a piece of flat
+land, perhaps six acres square, from which a long
+glen runs down to the Letaba. There I shall have
+my dwelling. In front there will be a park to put
+England to shame, miles of rolling green dotted with
+shapely woods, and in the centre a broad glade in
+which a salmon-river flows in shallows and falls among
+tree-ferns, arums, and bracken. There may be a lake,
+but I am undecided. In front I shall have a flower-garden,
+where every temperate and tropical blossom
+will appear, and in a sheltered hollow an orchard
+of deciduous trees, and an orange plantation. Highland
+cattle, imported at incredible expense, will roam
+on the hillsides. My back windows will look down
+4000 feet on the tropics, my front on the long
+meadow vista with the Iron Crown mountain for
+the sun to set behind. My house will be long and
+low, with broad wings, built of good stone and whitewashed,
+with a thatched roof and green shutters, so
+that it will resemble a <i>prazo</i> such as some Portuguese
+seigneur might have dwelt in in old times. Within
+it will be cool and fresh, with stone floors and big
+fireplaces, for the mists are chill and the winds can
+blow sharply on the mountains. There will be good
+pictures and books, and quantities of horns and skins.
+I shall grow my own supplies, and make my own
+wine and tobacco. Rides will be cut in the woods,
+and when my friends come to stay we shall drive
+bushbuck and pig, and stalk tiger-cats in the forest.
+There will be wildfowl on my lake, and Lochleven
+trout in my waters. And whoever cares to sail
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+5000 miles, and travel 1500 by train, and drive 50
+over a rough road, will find at the end of his journey
+such a palace as Kubla Khan never dreamed of. The
+accomplishment is difficult, but not, I trust, impossible.
+Once upon a time, as the story goes, a Dutchman
+talked with a predikant about the welfare of his
+soul. &ldquo;You will assuredly be damned,&rdquo; said the
+predikant, &ldquo;and burn in hell.&rdquo; &ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; said the
+Dutchman. &ldquo;If I am so unfortunate as to get in
+there, I shall certainly get out again.&rdquo; &ldquo;But that
+is folly and an impossibility,&rdquo; said the predikant.
+&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the other with confidence, &ldquo;wait and
+see: I shall make a plan.&rdquo; <i>Ek sal &rsquo;n plan maak</i>&mdash;this
+must be my motto, and I shall gratefully accept
+all honourable suggestions.</p>
+
+<p>The country is full of wealth&mdash;mines, agriculture,
+forestry, and pasturage. The presence of payable
+gold, both in quartz and banket, is undoubted, and
+some improvement in the roads, possibly a light
+railway, and the completion of the Selati line may
+provide for the rise of Haenertsburg from a very
+little dorp into a flourishing township. There is
+magnificent pasturage for stock, for cattle diseases
+are few and horse-sickness is unknown. It has been
+said that one acre in the Wood Bush will carry an
+ox, and though this is an exaggeration, it is certain
+that the rich herbage will maintain three or four
+times the head of stock which can be run on the
+high veld. The grass in spring is very early, and
+in the worst part of winter the forests can be resorted
+to, so that hand-feeding is almost unknown.
+The grass is sour veld, but any extensive pasturing
+would soon bring it into the sweet veld class. Once
+it were properly grazed down, it would be also a
+natural sheep country of high value. The soil is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+a clayey red loam, and the moist climate provides
+perfect conditions for most seed crops. Tobacco would
+thrive well&mdash;as well perhaps as on the lower slopes
+along the Groot Letaba, where Mr Altenroxel produces
+excellent pipe tobacco and a respectable cigar.
+It is a paradise for vegetables, and all hardy fruits
+and a few sub-tropical ones could be made to flourish
+in the rich straths. It is a land for small holdings,
+save for a few larger farms on the hill-tops, and
+here might arise a community of British settlers,
+making a new England out of a country which
+already possesses the climate of the West Highlands
+and the configuration of a Sussex park.</p>
+
+<p>At Skellum Kloof we descended from the uplands
+to an elevation of about 2000 feet, a type of scenery
+half-way between the wholesome high veld and the
+pernicious flats of the Lower Letaba. I take that
+descent to be all but the worst in the Transvaal,
+second only to the appalling cliff over which the road
+from Lydenburg drops to the Olifants. The grades
+are so steep that with a waggon it is necessary to
+outspan all animals but the two wheelers, and lock
+the wheels tightly. With a two-wheeled Cape cart
+to attempt it is to court destruction. Just at the
+foot is an awesome corner, and then a straight slope
+to the Letaba, a stream about the size of the Spean
+and not unlike it. There is a fine salmon pool below
+the ford, in which I swam circumspectly, being in
+dread of stray crocodiles. The valley has nothing
+of that raw unfinished look so common in South
+African landscapes. The peaks rise in noble contours
+from long stretches of forest and Kaffir tillage. As
+we crossed, the mist drooped over the hills and we
+ascended the far side to our camp in a heavy persistent
+rain. The whole country was full of crying
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+waters, and but for the clumps of wild bananas and
+the indescribable African smell, we might have been
+climbing to a Norwegian saeter after a long day&rsquo;s
+fishing.</p>
+
+<p>All night it rained in torrents, and next morning&mdash;New
+Year&rsquo;s Day&mdash;dawned in the same driving misty
+weather. We could not see twenty yards, and the
+long sloppy grass and thick red mud of the roads made
+bad going even for Afrikander ponies. We sent our
+heavy transport back, and, carrying little more than
+a dry shirt and a toothbrush, struck down a track
+which follows the eastern ridge of the valley. The
+vegetation was as dense as any jungle, and swishing
+through the reeds and ducking the low branches of
+trees soaked us to the skin in a few minutes. But in
+spite of discomfort it was a fascinating ride. The
+heavy tropical scents which the rain brought out of
+the ground, the intense silence of the drooping mists
+and water-laden forests, the clusters of beehive Kaffir
+huts in the hollows, all made up a world strange and
+new to the sight and yet familiar to the imagination.
+This was the old Africa of a boy&rsquo;s dream, and there is
+no keener delight than to realise an impression of
+childhood. Yet, though the air blew sharp, there
+was something unwholesome in it. Fever lurked
+in the comely glens, and the clear reaches of the
+Letaba were not the honest, if scanty, waters of
+the high veld. The pungent penetrating smell
+of the herbs we trod underfoot had an uncanniness
+in it as if all were simples and antidotes&mdash;a
+faint medicinal flavour like the ante-chamber of a
+physician.</p>
+
+<p>Krabbefontein, which we reached at mid-day, is a
+very beautiful clearing in the woods on the left bank
+of the river and at the foot of the Machubi glen. Mr
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+Altenroxel, the owner, farms on a large scale, and has
+long been famous for his tropical produce. The
+luxuriance of the growth is so great as almost to
+pass belief. Gum-trees grow from 10 to 15 feet in
+a year; and we saw a bamboo fully 50 feet high
+whose age was under two years. Huge drying-sheds
+for tobacco, numerous well-built outhouses and cottages,
+wholly the work of natives, and a few rondhavels
+made up the farm-steading. The time was
+past for apricots, but the orchard was full of grenadillas,
+finest of South African fruit, and kei apples;
+grapes were plentiful; and in a field of pines we
+destroyed the remnants of our digestion. The owner
+remained on his farm throughout the war, growing
+his own supplies, which included tea, sugar, and coffee.
+His tobacco is the finest brand of Transvaal pipe-tobacco
+I have smoked, and he exports to the
+towns boxes of light-flavoured but pleasant cigars,
+making everything on the farm except the labels.
+I have rarely seen native workers so intelligent and
+industrious, and the whole place leaves an impression
+of strenuous and enlightened toil. In the bungalow
+we ate our New Year&rsquo;s dinner, washed down by excellent
+German beer, carried many miles across the hills.
+If the conversation at table approached the domain
+of fact at all, the neighbourhood is full of uncanny
+things. A disgusting variety of tarantula, whose
+bite means death in half an hour, has his home
+around the tobacco-sheds; puff-adders abound; and
+the week before our visit a black mamba had attacked
+and killed a young Dutch girl. We heard, too,
+many tales of the eastern hunting-veld, and in the
+huge dark spaces beyond the rafters we saw the
+shadowy trophies of former hunting trips.</p>
+
+<p>At daybreak next morning, in a thick drizzle, we
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+started to reascend the mountains. A Kaffir set us
+on our way, and soon the hills closed in and we were
+in the long glen of Machubi. Machubi was a Kaffir
+chief with whom the Boers waged one of their many
+and most inglorious little wars. When his people
+were scattered he took refuge in the thick forest at
+the head of the river which bears his name. After
+my experience of that kind of forest I do not wonder
+that the Boers preferred not to fight a hand-to-hand
+battle in its tangled depths. So, after their fashion,
+they hired an impi of Swazis, who sat around the
+wood for three weeks, and ultimately slew the chief&mdash;not,
+however, before he had accounted in single-handed
+combat for three of his enemies. Mr Altenroxel
+possesses the old warrior&rsquo;s skull, which, except
+for the great thickness at the crown of the head, is
+finely shaped, and all but Caucasian in its lines. For
+this glen of Machubi I have nothing but praise: high
+bush-clad mountains, grey corries, streaked with white
+waterfalls, a limpid hill-stream, and in the flats green
+patches of Kaffir tillage. But the road&mdash;which once
+was a coach-road!&mdash;is pure farce. If there is a
+peculiarly tangled piece of scrub it dives into it, a
+really awkward rock and it ascends it, an unfordable
+reach of an easy stream and it makes straight for it,
+a swamp and it leads you into the deepest and direst
+part. We had constantly to dismount and coax our
+ponies down and up impossible steeps. My little
+African stallion as a rock-climber was not at his
+best, and I had some awkward positions to get him
+out of. One in particular remains in my memory. A
+very deep river could only be crossed by standing on
+a stone, leaping to an old log, and thence with a final
+sprawl to the farther bank. I turned my reins into
+a halter, went in front, and tried to coax my pony.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+When at last he did it he all but landed on my
+chest, and I made the acquaintance of the hardness
+of every one of his bones before I got him out of
+the valley.</p>
+
+<p>The road climbs a spur in the fork of two streams,
+and as one ascends and looks up the narrow twin
+glens, the old exquisite green of the true Wood Bush
+takes the place of the sadder colours of the lowlands.
+The heads of the glens have the form of what are
+called in the north of England and Scotland &ldquo;hopes,&rdquo;
+rounded green cup-shaped hollows; only here all things
+are on a larger scale, and the evergreen forest takes
+the place of birch and juniper in the corries. The
+road wound through wood and bracken, now coming
+out clear on a knoll, and now sinking to the level of
+some little stream. The mist which had covered the
+mountains was clearing, and one after another the
+green summits came forth like jewels against the pale
+morning sky. The tropical scents ceased, the sun
+shone out, and suddenly we were on the neck of the
+pass with a meadow-land country falling away from
+our feet. It was still hazy, but as we breakfasted the
+foreground slowly cleared. Little white roads sped
+away over the shoulders of hill; a rushing stream
+appeared in a hollow with one noble waterfall. Still
+the landscape opened; wood after wood came into
+being, glistening like emeralds in the dawn; long
+sweeps of pasture, each with its glimpse of water,
+carried the eye to where the great Drakensberg, blue
+and distant, was emerging from the fleecy mists of
+morning. Once more we were in the enchanted
+garden-land.</p>
+
+<p>It is easy to describe the awesome and the immense,
+but it is hard indeed to convey an adequate impression
+of exceeding charm and richness. Hard, at least,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+in dull prose. A line of gleaming poetry, such as
+Herrick&rsquo;s&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">&ldquo;Here in green meadows sits Eternal May,&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>or Theocritus&rsquo;s&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><ins title="pant' ôsden thereos mala pionos ôsde d' opôras">&#960;&#8049;&#957;&#964;&rsquo; &#8038;&#963;&#948;&#949;&#957;
+&#952;&#8051;&#961;&#949;&#959;&#962; &#956;&#8049;&#955;&#945;
+&#960;&#8055;&#959;&#957;&#959;&#962; &#8038;&#963;&#948;&#949; &#948;&rsquo;
+&#8000;&#960;&#8061;&#961;&#945;&#962;</ins>,<br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>will convey more of the true and intimate charm than
+folios of elaborated description. The main feature of
+the place is its sharp distinction from the common
+South African landscape. The high veld with its vast
+spaces, the noble mountain ravines, the flats of the
+bush veld, have all their own charm; but the traveller
+is plagued with the something unfriendly and austere
+in their air, as if all thought of human life had been
+wanting in their creation. They are built on a scale
+other than ours; man&rsquo;s labour has in the last resort
+no power to change them. They remain rough, unfinished,
+eternally strange, a country to admire, but
+scarcely to adopt and understand. But this garden-ground
+is wholly human. Natura Benigna was the
+goddess who presided at its creation, and no roughness
+enters into the &ldquo;warm, green-muffled&rdquo; slopes,
+the moist temperate weather, and the limpid waters.
+It is England, richer, softer, kindlier, a vast demesne
+laid out as no landscape gardener could ever contrive,
+waiting for a human life worthy of such an environment.
+But it is more&mdash;it is that most fascinating of
+all types of scenery, a garden on the edge of a wilderness.
+And such a wilderness! Over the brink of the
+meadow, four thousand feet down, stretch the steaming
+fever flats. From a cool fresh lawn you look clear
+over a hundred miles of nameless savagery. The first
+contrast which fascinates the traveller is between the
+common veld and this garden; but the deeper contrast,
+which is a perpetual delight to the dweller,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+is between his temperate home and the rude wilds
+beyond his park wall.</p>
+
+<p>What is to be the fate of it? There is no reason
+why it should not become at once a closely settled
+farming country. If the Pietersburg line is looped
+round between Magatoland and the Spelonken and
+brought south to meet a line from Leydsdorp, this
+intervening plateau will have a ready access to
+markets. The place, too, may become a famous
+sanatorium, to which the worried town-dwellers
+may retire to recover health from the quiet greenery.
+Country houses may spring up, and what is now the
+preserve of a few enthusiasts may become in time the
+Simla or Saratoga of the Transvaal. How much, I
+wonder, will the new-comers see of its manifold graces?
+Any one can appreciate the mellow air, the restful
+water-meadows, the profound stillness of the deep-bosomed
+hills. These are physical matters, making
+a direct appeal to the simpler senses. But for the
+rest? It is the place for youth, youth with high
+spirit and wide horizon, sensitive to scenery and
+weather, loving wild nature and adventure for their
+own noble sakes. How much, I wonder, will they see
+of it all&mdash;the people who have the purse to compass
+health resorts and the constitutions to need them? For
+here, as in all places of subtle and profound beauty,
+there is need of the seeing eye and the understanding
+heart.</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">&ldquo;We receive but what we give,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And in our life alone does Nature live;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ours is her wedding garment, ours her shroud!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And would we aught behold of higher worth<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Than that inanimate cold world allowed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To the poor loveless, ever-anxious crowd,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ah! from the soul itself must issue forth<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A light, a glory, a fair luminous cloud<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Enveloping the earth.&rdquo;<br /></span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+I do not think that the place will ever become staled.
+The special correspondent will not rhapsodise over it&mdash;he
+will find many places better worthy of his
+genius; the voice of the halfpenny paper will not,
+I think, be heard in that land. Its appeal is at once
+too obvious and too subtle: too obvious in its main
+features to please the common connoisseur, too subtle
+and remote for the wayfaring man to penetrate. It
+will remain, I trust, the paradise of a few&mdash;a paradise
+none the less their own because towns and hotels and
+country houses may have sprung up throughout it.
+To such it will always appear (as it appeared to us
+when we took farewell of it from the summit above
+Haenertsburg and saw the hills and glades sleeping
+in the mellow afternoon) an old-world Arcadia, a lost
+classic land which Nature with her artist&rsquo;s humour
+has created in this raw unstoried Africa.</p>
+
+<p class="date"><i>December 1902-January 1903.</i></p>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER IX.</h3>
+
+<h4>ON THE EASTERN VELD.</h4>
+
+<p>Machadodorp, that straggling village called after
+a Portuguese commander, is the most easterly outpost
+of the high veld. A few miles farther and there
+is a sheer fall into narrow mountain glens, down which
+the Elands River and the Delagoa Bay Railway make
+the best of their way to the lowlands. North lies the
+hill country of Lydenburg, to which the traveller may
+come in a coach after a day of heart-breaking hills
+and neck-breaking descents. But south for a good
+hundred miles sweeps the high veld in a broad promontory
+from Machadodorp to the Pongola, and on
+the east to the Swaziland border. It is the highest
+part of the great central tableland, and a very bleak
+dwelling-place in winter; but in summer and autumn
+it has a full share of the curious veld beauty. In
+particular, being in the line of the Drakensberg, you
+can come to its edge and look over into the wild
+tangle of glens which lie between you and the
+Lebombo hills. Also it is the lake district of South
+Africa, being full of tarns of all sizes from Lake
+Chrissie, which is a respectable sheet of water, to
+the tiniest reed-filled pan. It is the coldest, freshest,
+and windiest part of the land, a tonic country where
+the inhabitants are rarely ill, and few doctors can
+make a living.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+The journey to the first outspan from Machadodorp
+on the Ermelo road is a little monotonous, for you are
+not yet on the ridge of the high veld, the grass is
+rank, and the landscape featureless. You are pursued,
+too, by an unfinished railway, the Machadodorp-Carolina
+line, and if there is an uglier thing than
+the raw scar made by earthworks and excavations
+and uncompleted culverts, I do not know it. The line
+is being taken over by Government, and the sooner
+it is laid the better, for at present the richest farming
+population in the Transvaal are some sixty miles from
+a rail-head. At the fine stone bridge of the Komati
+you enter a more pleasing country, with a glimpse to
+the east of a gap in the hills through which the river
+enters the broken country. The Komati here is a
+slow high-veld stream creeping through long muddy
+pools with the slenderest of currents, but some eight
+miles down it is a hill torrent. This is one of the
+paradoxes of the high-veld rivers. Elsewhere it is
+in their cradle that streams have their &ldquo;bright
+speed&rdquo;; here the infant river must be content to
+creep like a canal, and lo! when it is almost full
+grown, it finds itself hurled in cataracts down a
+mountain valley. Who, seeing the Olifants near
+Middelburg, can ever believe that it is the same
+stream which swirls round a corner of the berg north
+of Ohrigstad; or, watching the sluggish Umpilusi
+crawling through the high veld, find any kinship
+between it and the Swaziland salmon-river? It is
+a romantic career&mdash;first a chain of half-stagnant
+pools, then a cataract, and then a full-grown river,
+rolling its yellow waters through leagues of bush and
+jungle to the tropical ocean.</p>
+
+<p>From Everard&rsquo;s store, which is a pleasant outspan
+among trees, the road climbs steeply to the ridge of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+the country. A tremendous sweep of veld comes into
+view, stretching to the west in hazy leagues till the
+eyes dazzle with the soft contours and infinite lines,
+and in the east barred at a great distance by a faint
+blue range, the Ingwenya Mountains. The first pan
+appeared, no larger than an English mill-dam, and
+overgrown with reeds which made a patch of darker
+green against the veld. One had the sensation of
+being somewhere on the roof of the world, for on
+every horizon but one the land sloped to a lower
+altitude, and even on the east the mountains seemed
+foreshortened, like the masts of a vessel just coming
+into sight at sea. Presently a little white dorp,
+Carolina, appeared some miles away on the left, with
+that curious look of a Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress village which
+so many veld townships possess. Then miles on miles
+of the same green downland, the road now sinking
+into little valleys with a glimpse of farm-steadings,
+and now holding the ridge in the centre of the amphitheatre.
+As the autumn evening fell, and the soft
+lights bathed the landscape, it became a spectral world,
+a Tir-an-Oig, in which it was difficult to believe that
+this rose-coloured slope was not a dream or that
+purple clump of trees a mirage. Little lochs appeared,
+some olive-green with rushes, some cold and black
+with inky waves lapping on dazzling white shores.
+Water, in Novalis&rsquo; quaint fancy, is as the eye to a
+landscape, the one thing generally lacking in the
+blind infinity of the veld. Strings of wild-geese
+passed over our heads, and from the meadow bottoms
+there came the call of ducks and now and then the
+bark of a korhaan. Curious echoes arose as we
+passed, for there is something in the geological
+structure of the country which makes it full of eerie
+noises. And then, as darkness closed down, a long
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+piece of water appeared, beyond which rose a little
+hill with two woods of blue gum and a light between
+them. A nearer view showed a trim cottage, with
+Kaffir huts around it, the beginnings of a garden,
+and, even in the dusk, a glimpse of long lines of
+crops stretching down to the lake. It was the homestead
+of Florence, which stands on the apex of a large
+block of Crown land, and is used as the headquarters
+of the land commissioner of the eastern district.</p>
+
+<p>From Florence to the Swaziland border is some
+fifty miles as the crow flies, so at dawn our horses were
+saddled, and, with a mule-cart for provisions, we set
+out towards the remote hills. The morning had begun
+in a Scots mist, but by ten o&rsquo;clock the sky was cloudless,
+and the intense blue of the lakes, the white shores,
+and the many patches of marl on the slopes caught
+the sun with a bewildering glare. The water in the
+pans is generally brackish, but some few are fresh, and
+one in particular, about four miles long, has wooded
+islets and a bold white bluff like a chalk cliff. The
+names are mostly Scots&mdash;Blairmore, Ardentinny,
+Hamilton,&mdash;for the land was first bought and settled
+by a Glasgow company. They are almost all stock
+farms, with little irrigation except along the Umpilusi;
+and many are fenced, efficiently enough, with slabs of
+stone for uprights. On one farm, Lake Banagher, we
+rode past a herd of some 300 or 400 blesbok and
+springbok, which are preserved by Mr Schalk Meyer,
+the owner. About noon we came into the shallow vale
+of the Umpilusi, and left it again for a high ridge,
+whence all afternoon we had a view of rolling country
+to the south, with the Slaangaapies mountains on the
+horizon. The great hills in the north of Swaziland
+were faint but clear, though we were still too high
+ourselves to see them to advantage. The country
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+began to change, the valleys became almost glens, a
+great deal of tumbled rock appeared overgrown with
+bush and bracken, and everything spoke of the beginnings
+of a mountain country, which, strangely enough,
+we were approaching from above. In the late afternoon
+we came to large belts of trees around a ruined
+farmhouse, and as the sky was beginning to threaten
+we outspanned for the night. We were not more than
+half a dozen miles from the Swazi border and in full
+sight of it&mdash;a chain of little kopjes with a hint of
+faint mountains behind.</p>
+
+<p>The farmhouse was an odd place seen in that stormy
+dusk. Thick woods of blue-gum and pine surrounded
+it, and below, also hemmed in by trees, was a lush
+water-meadow. The house had been a substantial
+stone building, but it was stripped to the walls, every
+scrap of woodwork having been used by the troops for
+fuel. The broken stoep was overgrown with moon-flowers,
+whose huge white blossoms gleamed uncannily
+in the shadows. We pushed through the wood and
+the overgrown paddock to a neglected orchard, where
+the fruit-trees had lost all semblance of their former
+selves, and struggled vainly among creepers and high
+grasses, and thence to the meadow where a little
+reddish stream trickled through the undergrowth.
+Owls flitted about like the ghosts of the place, and
+this relic of war with its moated-grange melancholy
+had a depressing effect on our spirits. We gladly
+sought our camp in an old barn on higher ground,
+where a blazing fire restored us to cheerfulness. The
+rain never fell, and the morning dawned grey and
+misty, so that when we set out for the border we had
+little hope of a view. We passed some Swazi kraals,
+and got directions from their picturesque occupants.
+The men are active and tall, and their wives with their
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+curious head-dresses are better to look at than the
+sluttish native women of the central districts. They
+are beautiful dancers, and the performance of a body
+of Swazis in war costume is a thing to remember.
+The country began to be extremely rocky, and tree-ferns
+and other specimens of sub-tropical vegetation
+appeared in the hollows. One glossy-leaved bush bore
+a berry about the size and shape of a rasp, called by
+the natives &ldquo;infanfaan,&rdquo; which had an agreeable sub-acid
+flavour. A little hill, looking as if it were made
+of one single gigantic boulder, appeared on the right,
+and with some scrambling we got our horses to the
+foot of it. This was Bell&rsquo;s Kop, a famous landmark,
+and beyond and below was Swaziland.</p>
+
+<p>The morning had cleared, and though the horizons
+were misty, we saw enough to reward us. The ground
+fell sharply away from our feet to a green glen studded
+with trees, down which a white road wound. A hill
+shut the glen, but over the hill and at a much lower
+altitude we saw the strath of the Umpilusi, with the
+river running in wide sweeps with shores of gravel,
+not unlike the Upper Spey as seen from the Grampians.
+Beyond were tiers of broken blue hills, rising very
+high towards the north, where they culminate in Piggs&rsquo;
+Peak, but fading southward into a misty land where
+lay the Lebombo flats. The grey soft air had an
+intense stillness, a kind of mountain melancholy, but
+far to the south there was a patch of sunlight on the
+green hills above Amsterdam. It is a type of view
+which can be had in all parts of the Drakensberg,
+from Mont aux Sources frowning over Natal to the
+Spelonken looking down on the plains of the Letaba&mdash;a
+view to me of infinite charm, for you stand upon the
+dividing line between two forms of country and two
+climates, looking back upon the endless prairies and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+their fresh winds and forward upon warm glens and
+the remote malarial tropics.</p>
+
+<p>From Bell&rsquo;s Kop we fetched a wide circuit, going
+to Amsterdam, which was not more than fifteen miles
+from where we stood, by Florence and Ermelo, a
+journey of over 100 miles. The afternoon ride was
+something to remember, for the day had cleared into a
+bright afternoon with cool winds blowing, and the
+green ridges had a delicate pastoral beauty, as of sunlit
+sheep-walks. When we forded the Umpilusi its
+sluggish pools were glowing with the fires of sunset.
+Cantering in the hazy twilight of the long slopes was
+pure romance, and the sounds from a Kaffir kraal, the
+slow mild-eyed oxen on the road, and the wheeling of
+wild birds had all the strangeness of things seen and
+heard in a dream. I know no such tonic for the
+spirits, for in such a scene and at such a time the
+blood seems to run more freely in the veins, the mind
+to be purged from anxious indolence, and the whole
+nature to become joyous and receptive. Much comes
+from the air. There is something in those spaces of
+clear absolute ether, eternally wide, fresh as spring
+water, pure as winds among snow, which not only
+sustains but vitalises and rejuvenates the body.
+There is something, too, in the life. Fine scenery is
+too often witnessed by men when living the common
+life of civilisation and enjoying the blessings of a good
+cook and a not indifferent cellar. But on the veld
+there is bare living and hard riding, so that a man
+becomes thin and hard and very much alive, the dross
+of ease is purged away, and body and mind regain the
+keen temper which is their birthright.</p>
+
+<p>We outspanned at a Boer farm and dined with the
+family off home-made bread, <i>confyt</i>, and tea. They
+were very hospitable and friendly, and discussed the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+war and current politics with all freedom. The walls
+were adorned with numerous portraits of <em>British</em>
+generals; and the farmer, who had been in Bermuda,
+displayed with much pride the carvings with which
+he had beguiled his captivity. One of the sons read
+assiduously a Dutch translation of one of Mayne
+Reid&rsquo;s novels, and when he could tear himself from
+the narrative contributed to the talk some details of
+his commando-life under Ben Viljoen, for whom, in
+common with most of the younger Dutch, he had a
+profound admiration. These people are a strange
+mixture&mdash;so hospitable, that the traveller is ashamed
+to go near a Boer farm, seeing the straitness of their
+lives and the generosity with which they give what
+they have; and yet so squalid that they make little
+effort to better their condition. This particular farmer
+owned four large farms, worth in the present market
+not less than £20,000; the sale of one or a part of
+one would have given him ample means to buy stock
+and start again. But he was content to go on as he
+was, running up a long bill with the Repatriation
+depot, and grumbling at the high prices for stock compared
+with what he had been used to pay. The
+result was that, though he had been back for nine
+months, I saw no living thing on that farm but a few
+chickens, six goats, and a spavined horse.</p>
+
+<p>We made the last stage to Florence shortly after sunrise,
+and arrived at the homestead in time for breakfast.
+The twenty odd miles to Ermelo were the easy journey
+of an afternoon. We passed the ruined township
+of Chrissie, with a roofless kirk and some flourishing
+plantations of firs. The lake itself lay over some
+meadows, a pear-shaped piece of water, very shallow,
+and at its greatest perhaps some six or eight miles
+round. Yet in spite of its shallowness there is ample
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+depth for a small centre-board; and when the railway
+is completed and Chrissie becomes a summer sanatorium,
+there is no reason why a modest kind of
+yachting should not be enjoyed. For the rest it is a
+bare road, with outcrops of coal appearing here and
+there, and the infant Vaal to be crossed, a very mean
+and muddy little stream. You come on Ermelo with
+surprise, dipping over the brow of a barren ridge and
+seeing a cheerful little town beneath you. It suffered
+heavily in the war, being literally levelled with the
+ground, but when we passed most of the houses had
+been cobbled together and new buildings were arising.
+It lies in a rich mineral tract, and is also the centre
+of a wide pastoral district, so with improved communications
+it may very well become a thriving
+country town. Whoever laid it out showed good
+judgment in the planting of trees; and in that bare
+land it is pleasant to come on such a village in a
+wood. My chief recollection of Ermelo is of a talk
+with a deputation of neighbouring farmers on the
+subject of cattle diseases. One admirable old man
+explained his perplexity. &ldquo;Formerly,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;we
+used to be told that all diseases came from on High.
+Now we are told that some are from on High and
+some are our own fault. But which is which? Personally,&rdquo;
+he concluded, &ldquo;I believe that Providence
+is a good deal to blame for them all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>About noon the following day we set out for Amsterdam.
+The first part of the road is monotonous,
+for it follows a straight line of blockhouses in a bleak
+featureless country. We crossed the inevitable Vaal
+again, a little larger and perhaps a little dirtier, but
+not appreciably more attractive. Sometimes we came
+to a flat moor like Rannoch with faint blue mountains
+beyond it, but the common type was a succession of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+ridges without a shade of difference between them.
+The weather had broken, and dust-coloured showers
+pursued us over the face of the heavens, till, as we
+came in sight of the considerable hill of Bankkop, the
+whole sky behind us had darkened for a wet evening.
+As we came down from the height, where the colour
+of the roads told of coal, and entered a green marshy
+valley, the storm burst on us,&mdash;a true African rain
+which drenches a man in two minutes. We sought
+shelter in a farmhouse, or rather in a blockhouse in
+the stackyard, for there was little left of the house
+except a shanty which the owner had restored for his
+present accommodation. All evening it rained in
+solid sheets, and to dinner, a meal cooked under
+difficulties, the Boer farmer came and talked to us,
+sitting on a barrel and telling stories of the war.
+He had the ordinary tale&mdash;against the war at the
+start, compelled to fight, had remonstrated with
+Louis Botha on his conduct of the Natal campaign,
+and, grumbling greatly, had followed his leader till
+he was caught and sent to Ceylon. The Boer discipline
+must have been a curious growth, and, when
+we realise the intense individualism of the fighting
+men, we begin to see the greatness of the achievement
+of Botha and Delarey in keeping them together
+at all. Our friend was living in squalid penury, but
+he was drawing enough in mineral options on his farm
+to have restocked it and lived in comfort, if he had
+pleased. There is no doubt in my mind, after such
+experiences, as to what would have been the wisest
+and kindest form of repatriation for landowners, had
+we had the courage to adopt it,&mdash;compulsory sale of
+a portion of the farm, and out of the capital thus supplied
+the farmer could have bought what he wanted
+at reasonable prices from Government depots. Such
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+a method would have given the Government more
+good land, which it urgently wants; it would have
+saved the endless credit accounts which in the long-run
+will give trouble both to Boer and Government;
+and it would have saved the pauperisation into which
+the Boer is only too ready to sink. There would, of
+course, have been many exceptions in the case of the
+very poor and landless classes, but for the landholder
+it would have been not only the most politic but in
+his eyes the most intelligible plan.</p>
+
+<p>I shall never forget the night spent in that blockhouse.
+Every known form of vermin&mdash;fleas, bugs, mosquitoes,
+spiders, rats, and, for all I know, snakes&mdash;came
+out of the holes where they had fasted for months
+and attacked us. I lay for hours swathed in a kaross,
+my face tingling, watching through the open square of
+door a melancholy moon trying to show herself among
+the rain-clouds, and wishing I had had the wisdom to
+sleep on the wet veld rather than in that chamber of
+horrors. Sheer bodily weariness induced a few uneasy
+hours of sleep, but the first ray of dawn found
+me thankfully arising. We breakfasted in haste, inspanned
+hurriedly, and were on the road an hour after
+sunrise. A long ascent brought us to the ridge of
+those hills of which Bankkop and Spitzkop are part,
+an extension of the Drakensberg from Wakkerstroom
+across the veld to the Swazi border. Then we passed
+over some very flat meadows to another ridge, from
+which we had a clear view of the Slaangaapies mountains
+to the south, and before us to the north-east
+the long green range of hills above Amsterdam. It
+was a curious picture for the Transvaal, a line of hills
+with regular glens and soft contours unbroken by rock
+or tree, and at the foot in a wood a few white cottages&mdash;a
+reminiscence of Galloway or Tweeddale; and one
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+can well understand how the Scots settlers, who
+founded the place and gave it its first name of
+Robburnia after their national poet, saw in the landscape
+a picture of their home. We skirted the village
+on the left, and found the farm where we were to outspan.
+Here heroic measures were taken to get rid of
+the results of the blockhouse. A large tub was filled
+with hot water, and a bottle of sheep-dip was emptied
+into it. In this mixture we wallowed, and emerged
+from it scarified but clean.</p>
+
+<p>The farm was the property of a Scots gentleman,
+who in six months had made new water-furrows, built
+himself a comfortable house, put over 200 acres under
+crops, and was running a fair head of stock on the hills.
+In the afternoon we rode with him to Mr Forbes&rsquo; farm
+of Athole, some three miles off, which is perhaps
+the largest private landed estate in one piece in the
+country. It runs to some 60,000 acres, a huge square
+tract between two streams, from which is obtained a
+fine prospect of the Swaziland hills. Mr Forbes, who
+owns much land across the border, is one of the two or
+three living Englishmen who know the Swazis best,
+having for fifty years or more traded, farmed, and
+mined in their country. Before the war Athole was a
+great game-preserve, with 3000 blesbok, 2000 springbok,
+as well as reed-buck, impala, the two rheboks,
+and a few klipspringer. Now some odd springbok
+along the stream are almost all that remain. But
+when Mr Forbes first came to the place eland, koodoo,
+and hartebeest were the common game, and one could
+kill a lion on most farms. Of the original Scots
+settlers, who gave the name of New Scotland to the
+district, a few still remain, and their farms can be told
+far off by the neat strips of plantation which make
+the place like a hillside in Ayrshire. The land was acquired
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+very cheaply from the Government,&mdash;one farm,
+if tales be true, going for a pair of boots, and another
+for a keg of whisky. The Boers themselves bought
+the whole tract from the Swazi border to Ermelo, and
+from the Komati in the north to the Pongola in the
+south&mdash;perhaps 3000 square miles&mdash;from the Swazi
+king for 150 oxen and 50 blankets. As at that
+time an ox was worth about 30s., it was not a high
+price, and the Boers still further improved the bargain
+by declining to pay the blankets. When Mr Forbes
+came to the place he was visited by a deputation of
+Swazi chiefs to discuss the subject, and to save trouble
+gave them the blankets from his own stores.</p>
+
+<p>In Amsterdam next morning I was taken for a prospector,
+and played the part for a considerable time,
+to the confusion of an ex-official of the place, who
+wished to profit by my knowledge, but could make
+neither head nor tail of my answers. It is a sleepy
+little town, with not more than half a dozen houses
+lying pleasantly in gardens, with mountain streams on
+all sides and pastoral green hills to the east and north.
+South, where lay our road, are swelling moorlands,
+flanked by the Slaangaapies and the Swazi hills, and
+crossed at frequent intervals by clear grey streams.
+The first of these is the Compies, a few miles from
+the village, and a more naturally perfect trout-stream
+I have rarely seen. There were deep blue pools, and
+long shallow stretches, and little rapids in whose tail
+one should have been able to get a salmon. When
+trout become thoroughly acclimatised in the Transvaal,
+and the proper waters are stocked, he will be a happy
+man who owns a mile or two of the Compies. As if
+to intensify the atmosphere of fishing, it began to rain
+heavily and a cold mist blew up from the south. The
+long grass became hoar with rain-drops, and the innumerable
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+veld watercourses found their voices after
+months of dry silence. Still more lipping grey streams,
+and then the rain ceased as suddenly as it had come,
+and in a deceptive gleam of sunlight we came into Piet
+Retief. It is a long, straggling, dingy village lying
+on two ridges. The mountains on all sides are too far
+off to be a feature in one&rsquo;s view of it, and save that it
+is one of the backdoors to Swaziland, there is little of
+interest for the traveller. At the entrance you pass a
+monument to Piet Retief, of which only the pedestal
+is completed&mdash;a poor tribute to a great man.</p>
+
+<p>After lunch the rain began again in real earnest,
+and there was nothing for it but to loiter through the
+afternoon in waterproofs and hope for a dry morrow.
+It is not the most cheerful of places, but seen through
+the pauses of the driving wrack it had a wild charm of
+its own. In particular the Slaangaapies mountains, a
+dozen miles off, when by any chance they were visible
+for a moment, stood out black and threatening, with
+white cataracts seaming their sides and murky shadows
+in their glens. The Dutch name means &ldquo;Snake-monkeys,&rdquo;
+but the natives call them beautifully &ldquo;The
+Mother of Rains.&rdquo; The inhabitants of the district are
+almost the lowest type in the Transvaal,&mdash;poor, disreputable,
+half-bred, despised by their neighbours and
+neglected by the late Government. The progressive
+element in the district is represented by a German
+colony, who were originally placed there by the wily
+Boer as a buffer against the natives, but who throve
+and multiplied and now own the best farms in the
+district. The most interesting thing I saw in the
+place was a large Boer hound, with the hair on the
+ridge of his back growing in an opposite direction to
+the rest of his coat. Now this type is rare, and, when
+found, makes the finest hunting dog in the world, for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+he will tackle a charging lion, and, indeed, fears
+nothing created. I had often been advised if I came
+across such a dog to buy him at any price, but in this
+case his Dutch owner utterly refused to sell, and I had
+to depart in envious gloom.</p>
+
+<p>Before daybreak next morning, in a mist which
+clothed the world like a garment, so that we walked in
+fleecy vapour, we set off on the sixty miles&rsquo; journey to
+Wakkerstroom. The first half is through an exceedingly
+dreary land. We crossed the Assegai, a finely
+named but inglorious stream, chiefly remarkable for
+its rapid flooding, and then for a score of miles we
+ascended and descended little sandy hills, and saw on
+each side of the road as far as the edge of the mist
+the same endless coarse herbage. In fine weather
+there is the wall of Slaangaapies to give dignity to the
+landscape; but for us there was only a bank of cloud.
+Before our mid-day outspan the sky cleared a little,
+and huge stony blue hills appeared on our left, with
+bush straggling up their sides and stray sun-gleams
+on their bald summits. We outspanned for lunch at
+Vanderpoel&rsquo;s store, which is a couple of huts in a
+perfectly flat dusty plain with a fine ring of hazy
+mountains around it. The day became exceedingly
+hot, still cloudy, but with a dazzle behind the mists
+which it hurt the eye to look at,&mdash;the kind of weather
+which makes the cheeks flame and tires the traveller
+far more readily than a clear sun and a blue sky.
+Again the same hills and dales, but now with a
+gradually increasing elevation, till when we came to
+a fine stream falling over a precipice into a meadow
+and looked back, we saw the Slaangaapies as if from
+a neighbour hill-top. A curious little peak appeared
+on the right, with what the Dutch call a <i>castrol</i> or
+saucepan on its head, a perfectly round ring of kranzes
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+which presented the appearance of an extinguisher
+dropped down suddenly on the summit. It is a
+common sight in this part of the Berg, where the
+great original chain of cliffs has been broken and
+hills lie tumbled about like the <i>débris</i> of greater
+mountains.</p>
+
+<p>At Joubert&rsquo;s Hoogte the road emerges from the
+glens, and the south opens up into a mazy tangle of
+hills. It is one of the noblest views in the country;
+but for us the mist curtailed the perspective, while it
+greatly increased the mystery. Shapes of mountains
+floating through a haze have far more fascination for
+the lover of highlands than a long prospect to a clearly
+defined horizon. Below lay the broad woody valley
+of the Upper Pongola, shut off in the east by the spurs
+of the Slaangaapies. The far mist was flecked with
+little sun-gleams, which showed now an emerald slope,
+now the grey and black of a cliff, and now a white
+flash of water. The air had the intense stillness of
+grey weather and great height; only the neighing of
+our horses broke in upon what might have been the
+first chaos out of which the world emerged. Thence
+for a few miles we kept on the ridge till we dipped
+into the hollow of a stream and slowly climbed a long
+pass where the road clung to the edges of precipitous
+slopes and wriggled among great rocks. The mist
+closed down, and but for the feeling in the air which
+spoke of wider spaces, we could not have told that we
+had reached the top of Castrol&rsquo;s Nek, the gate of the
+South-Eastern Transvaal. A Constabulary notice
+plastered on a weather-worn board was another sign
+that the place was a known landmark. As soon as
+we passed the summit the country grew softer. The
+shoulders of hills seemed greener, and along the little
+watercourses bracken and a richer vegetation appeared.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+The evening was falling, and as we slipped down the
+winding road the white mist faded into deeper and
+deeper grey, till at last we emerged from it and saw a
+clear sky above us and hills standing out black and
+rain-washed against the yellows of sunset. By-and-by
+in the centre of the amphitheatre of mountains a
+dozen lights twinkled out, and in a little we were
+off-saddling very weary horses in the pleasant town
+of Wakkerstroom.</p>
+
+<p class="date"><i>March-April 1903.</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER X.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE GREAT NORTH ROAD.</h4>
+
+<p>The romance which is inseparable from all roads
+belongs especially to those great arteries of the
+world which traverse countries and continents, and
+unite different zones and climates, and pass through
+extreme variations of humankind. For in them the
+adventurous sense of the unknown, which is found
+in a country lane among hedgerows, becomes an
+ever-present reality to the most casual traveller.
+And it is a peculiarity of the world&rsquo;s roads that
+this breath of romance blows most strongly on the
+paths which point to the Pole-star. The Æmilian
+Way, up which the Roman legions clanked to the
+battlefields of Gaul and Britain, or that great track
+which leads through India to the mountains of the
+north and thence to the steppes of Turkestan, captures
+the fancy more completely than any lateral
+traverse of the globe. A way which passes direct
+through the widest extremes of weather, and is in
+turn frozen and scorched or blown in sand, has an
+air of purpose which is foreign to long tracks in the
+same latitude, and carries a more direct impress of
+the shaping and audacious spirit of man. Of all
+north roads I suppose the greatest to be that which
+runs from the Cape to Egypt, greatest both for its
+political meaning, the strangeness of the countries to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+which it penetrates, the difficulties and terrors of
+the journey, and, above all, for the fact that it is
+a traverse of the extreme length of a vast and
+mysterious continent. It has been associated in the
+south with the schemes of a great dreamer, and in
+the north with the practical work of a great soldier
+and a great administrator. Between these two
+beginnings we all but lose trace of it in wilds of
+sand and swamp, the dense forests, the lakes and
+the wild mountains of Equatorial Africa, penetrated
+at rare intervals by native paths and old hunters&rsquo;
+tracks. But to the eye of faith the road is there,
+marching on with single purpose from one railway
+head on the veld to another in the Soudanese desert.
+The men who travel it are hunters and prospectors,
+a few soldiers, a chance official, and once and again
+an explorer: but they travel only short stages, and
+there are few indeed who, like my friend Mr E. S.
+Grogan, carry their staff and scrip from end to end
+of it. To the amateur, like the present writer, who
+goes a little way on it, the thought of this majestic
+Way gives dignity to the ill-defined sandy track in
+which he may be floundering, and makes each
+northern horizon seem like the hill-tops of the Apennines,
+somewhere behind which, as the pilgrim is
+confident, lie the towers and pinnacles of Rome. I
+would recommend as a panacea for cold and comfortless
+nights on the road that the mind of the
+traveller should occupy itself with a projected itinerary.
+He will see the Road running as a hunter&rsquo;s
+path from the Limpopo to the Zambesi&mdash;through
+thorn scrub and park-land and stony mountain. Then
+he will travel up the Shiré by Nyassaland and on
+by Tanganyika to Ruwenzori and the lakes; and if
+he is not asleep by the time he has seen the sun
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+rise on Albert Nyanza and fought his way through the
+Dinkas and the mosquitoes of the Nile swamps, then
+he must be an unquiet man with an evil conscience.</p>
+
+<p>Only a little section of the road runs through
+the Transvaal. The practical road has indeed been
+diverted at De Aar in Cape Colony, and in the
+shape of a railway runs to Rhodesia and the neighbourhood
+of the Victoria Falls. But to the pilgrim
+this is a palpable subterfuge, for the straight highway
+goes through the Transvaal, taking the form
+of a railway as far as Pietersburg, and then becoming
+the Bulawayo coach-road for some eighty miles,
+till it plunges sheer into the bush as a hunter&rsquo;s
+road and makes for Main Drift on the Limpopo.
+It is a type of the vicissitudes which the Great
+Road is made to suffer,&mdash;railway, admitted highroad,
+hunter&rsquo;s path, native track, no road, and then
+a chain of waterways till it becomes a river, and
+meets the railway again after 3000 miles of obscurity.
+With a profound respect for the road, I am constrained
+to admit that it makes bad going, that it
+is insufficiently provided with water, that there are
+no signposts or inns or, for the matter of that, white
+habitations, that lions do the survey work and wild
+pigs the engineering, and that it is apt to cease
+suddenly and leave the traveller to his own devices.
+But for the eye of Faith, that wonderful possession
+of raw youth and wise old age, it is as broad and
+solid as the Appian Way; the wheels of empire and
+commerce pass over it, and cities, fairer than a mirage,
+seem to rise along its shadowy course.</p>
+
+<p>Our starting-point was the Repatriation depot at
+Pietersburg, a large white-walled enclosure, with
+row upon row of stables and sheds and in the centre
+a cluster of thatched white dwelling-houses. It has
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+the air of an Eastern caravanserai, for convoys come
+in and go out all day long, and the news of the
+Road is brought there by every manner of traveller.
+Apart from Government work with its endless trains
+of ox and mule waggons, it is the starting-place for
+all sorts of prospecting and hunting parties, and
+farmers from seventy miles round ride in for stock
+or supplies. If a lion is killed or gold found or a
+man lost anywhere in the north, word will be brought
+in to the depot by some Dutch conductor, so that
+the place is far better supplied with news of true
+interest than your town with its dozen newspapers.
+For the essence of news is that it should be vital
+to one&rsquo;s daily interests, and tidings of a massacre
+in China is less stimulating to the mind than word
+of a neighbour&rsquo;s windfall or disaster. I can conceive
+no more fascinating life than to dwell comfortably
+on the edge of a savage country from which in the
+way of one&rsquo;s business all news comes first to one&rsquo;s
+ears. To control transport is to be the tutelary genius
+of travel, and in a sense the life of the wilds takes
+its origin from the little caravanserai which sends
+forth and welcomes the traveller.</p>
+
+<p>The high veld continues for some thirty miles north
+of the town before it sinks into bush and a humbler
+elevation. It is ordinary high veld&mdash;bleak, dusty,
+and in August a sombre grey; but on the east the
+blue lines, which are the Wood Bush and the Spelonken
+mountains, and in the far west the thin hills about the
+Magalakween valley, remind the traveller how near
+he is to the edge of the central plateau. Ten miles
+out a crest was reached, and we looked down on a
+long slope, with high mountains making gates in the
+distance, and a sharp little hill called Spitzkop set in
+the foreground. It was a cool hazy day, and in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+west the kopjes seemed to swim in an illimitable sea
+of blue. The land is all part of Malietsie&rsquo;s location,
+and patches of tillage and an occasional cluster of
+huts gave it a habitable air. The native girls wear
+thick rings of brass round their necks, which gives
+them a straight figure and a high carriage of the
+head, pleasant to see in a place where people slouch
+habitually. Malietsie&rsquo;s is one of those Basuto tribes
+which are scattered over the North Transvaal&mdash;not the
+best type of native, for they are credulous and idle in
+their raw state, and when Christianised and dwelling
+near mission-stations, incorrigibly lazy and deceitful.
+They are also inordinately superstitious. I found that
+no one of my boys, who were mostly from Malietsie&rsquo;s,
+would stir ten yards beyond the camp after dark. At
+first I thought the reason was dread of wild beasts,
+but I discovered afterwards that it was fear of spooks,
+particularly of one spook who rolled along the road in
+the shape of a ball of fire. It is a tribute to the
+greatness of the North Road that it should have a
+respectable ghost of its own. In a little we passed
+the last store, kept by an old Scotsman, who gave us
+much information about the district. He talked of
+the Road, the River, and the Mountain, without
+further designation, which is a pleasing habit of
+country folk, who give the generic name to the
+instances which dominate their daily life. The Limpopo
+was the River, the Zoutpansberg the Mountain,
+because no other river or mountain had a local
+importance comparable with these, just as to a Highland
+gillie his own particular ben is &ldquo;the hill,&rdquo; just
+as to Egypt the Nile is not the Nile but &ldquo;the River.&rdquo;
+He measured distance, too, by the Road: this place
+was so many miles down the road, that water-hole so
+many days&rsquo; journey up.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+We inspanned again in the evening, and in a little
+turned the flanks of Spitzkop, and coming over a
+little rise saw a wide plain before us densely covered
+with dwarf trees. The long line of the Zoutpansberg
+comes to an abrupt end in a cliff above the Zoutpan.
+On the west the huge mass of the Blaauwberg also
+breaks off sharply in tiers of fine precipices. Between
+the two is a level, from fifteen to twenty miles wide,
+which is the pass from the high veld to the north.
+It is a broad gate, but the only one, for to the east
+the Zoutpansberg is impassable for a hundred miles,
+and on the west beyond the Blaauwberg the Magalakween
+valley is a long circuit and a difficult country.
+The great mountain walls were dim with twilight,
+but there was day enough left to see the immediate
+environs of the road. They had a comical suggestion
+of a dilapidated English park. The road was fine
+gravel, the trees in the half light looked often like
+gnarled oaks and beeches, and the coarse bush grass
+seemed like neglected turf. It is a resemblance which
+dogs one through the bush veld. You are always
+coming to the House and never arriving. At every
+turn you expect a lawn, a gleam of water, a grey
+wall; soon, surely, the edges will be clipped, the sand
+will cease, the dull green will give place to the tender
+green of watered grass. But the House remains to
+be found, though I have a fancy that it may exist on
+a spur of Ruwenzori. As it was, we had to put up
+with a tent and a dinner of curried korhaan, and
+during the better part of a very cold night some
+jackals performed a strenuous serenade.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning dawned clear and very chilly,
+the mountains smoking with mist, and the dust
+behind our waggons rising to heaven in sharply
+outlined columns. However cold and comfortless
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+the night, however badly the limbs ache from sleeping
+on hard ground, there is something in the tonic
+mornings which in an hour or so dispels every feeling
+but exhilaration. Water-holes have been made for
+the post-cart at lengthy intervals, but between there
+is nothing but rank bush, with flat trees like the
+vegetation in a child&rsquo;s drawing produced by rubbing
+the pencil across the paper. Animal life was rich
+along the road&mdash;numerous small buck, a belated
+jackal or two, the graceful black-and-white birds
+which country people call &ldquo;Kaffir queens,&rdquo; korhaan,
+guinea-fowl, partridge, quantities of bush crows, and
+an endless variety of hawk and falcon. We left the
+Road and made a long detour over sandy tracks to
+visit the Zoutpan, from which the hills get their
+name, the most famous of Transvaal salt-pans. It is
+about three miles in circumference, and consisted at
+this season of caked grey mud, with little water-trenches
+and heaps of white salt on their banks. A
+wise law of the late Government forbade the alienation
+of salt-pans, but for some unknown reason a
+concession was given over this one, and instead of
+being the perquisite in winter of the <i>arme Boeren</i> it
+is managed by a Pietersburg syndicate, and as far as
+I could judge managed very well. The work is done
+by natives from the mountains who live round a little
+stream which flows from the berg to the pan, and
+forms the only fresh water for miles. The day became
+very hot, and the glare from the pan was blinding to
+unaccustomed eyes. As we returned to the main road,
+the noble mass of the Blaauwberg was before us, one
+of the finest and least known of South African mountains.
+That curious fiasco, the Malapoch war, was
+fought there, and Malapoch&rsquo;s people still live in its
+corries. To a rock-climber it is a fascinating picture,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+with sheer rock walls streaked with fissures which a
+glass shows to be chimneys, and I longed to be able
+to spend a week exploring its precipices. To a
+mountaineer South Africa offers many attractions, for
+apart from what may be found in isolated ranges,
+there are some hundreds of miles of the Drakensberg
+with thousands of good climbs, and above all the
+great north-eastern buttress of Mont aux Sources,
+which to the best of my knowledge has never been
+conquered.</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon the country changed, the bush
+opened out, timber trees took the place of thorn, and
+long glades appeared of good winter pasture. There
+was a great abundance of game, and for the first time
+the paauw appeared, stalking about or slowly flapping
+across the grass. He is a fine bird to shoot with the
+rifle, but a hard fellow for a gun, for it is difficult to
+get within close range; and as a rule at anything over
+thirty yards he will carry all the shot you care to give
+him. This park-land lasts for about ten miles, and
+then at Brak River it ends and a dense thorn scrub
+begins, which extends almost without interruption to
+the Limpopo. There we found our relays of mules,
+and on a dusty patch near the mule-scherm we outspanned
+for the night. We were nearing the country
+of big game. A lion had been seen on the Bulawayo
+road the day before, a little north of the station; and
+it was a common enough thing to have them reconnoitring
+the scherm. As soon as darkness fell the cry
+of wolves began, that curious unearthly wail which is
+one of the eeriest of veld sounds. Most forcible reminder
+of all, a hunting party ahead of us had lost a
+man, who, after wandering for six days in the bush,
+while his companions gave him up for dead, had come
+out on the Road and been found by the man in charge
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+of our relays. It was a miracle that he had not lost
+his reason or perished of thirst and fatigue, for he had
+neither food nor water with him, and only a little cloth
+cap to keep off the tropical sun. An old Boer from
+Louis Trichard, trekking with oxen, camped beside us;
+and after dining delicately off guinea-fowl I went over
+to his fire to talk to him. He was a typical back-veld
+Boer&mdash;a great hunter, friendly, without any sort of
+dignity, a true frontier man, to whom politics mean
+nothing and his next meal everything. He told me
+amazing lion stories, in which he always gave the
+<i>coup de grâce</i>, and displayed incredible courage and
+skill. He showed me with pride a ·400 express bullet
+which he kept wrapt up in paper&mdash;whether as a charm
+or a souvenir I do not know, for his own weapon was an
+ancient Martini. His one political prejudice concerned
+the Jews, whose character he outlined to me with
+great spirit. They were the opposite of everything
+implied in the term &ldquo;oprecht&rdquo;; but I am inclined to
+believe that, like many of us, he secretly believed that
+all foreigners were Jews, and in hugging the prejudice
+showed himself a nationalist at heart.</p>
+
+<p>The coach-road runs due north to Tuli and Bulawayo,
+but the Road itself takes a slight bend to the east and
+follows the course of the mythical Brak River. For
+miles this stream does not exist&mdash;there is not even the
+slightest suggestion of a bed; and then appears a
+dirty hole full of greenish, brackish water, and we hail
+the resurrected river. It is necessary for the traveller
+to know where such holes lie, for they are the only
+water in the neighbourhood; and though the Road
+keeps close to them, there is nothing in the dense
+thorn bush which lines its sides to reveal the presence
+of water. I have never seen bleaker bush-land. All
+day long, through hanging clouds of dust, we crept
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+through the featureless country, the Zoutpansberg and
+Blaauwberg behind us growing hourly fainter. For
+the information of travellers, I would say that the
+first water is at a place called Krokodilgat, the second
+at a place called Rietgaten, and that after that the
+Road bends northward away from the river, and there
+is no water till Taqui is reached. The dust of the
+track was thick with the spoor of wild cats, wolves,
+the blue wildebeest, and at rare intervals of wild
+ostrich. As night fell the bush became very dead and
+silent, save for the far-away howl of a jackal,&mdash;a dull
+olive-green ocean under a wonderful turquoise sky.
+We encamped after dark in a little wayside hollow,
+where we built a large fire and a massive scherm or
+enclosure of thorns for the animals. There was every
+chance of a lion, so I retired to rest with pleasant
+anticipations and a quantity of loaded firearms near
+my head. But no lion came, though about two o&rsquo;clock
+in the morning the mules grew very restless, and
+a majestic figure (which was indeed no other than the
+present writer&rsquo;s), armed with a ·400 express, might
+have been seen clambering about the top of the
+waggon and straining sleepy eyes into the bush.</p>
+
+<p>We started at dawn next morning, as we had a long
+journey before water. The thorn bush disappeared
+and gave place to a more open country, full of a kind
+of wormwood which gave an aromatic flavour to the
+fresh morning air. Then came a new kind of bush,
+the mopani, a wholesome green little shrub, with
+butterfly-shaped foliage. The leaves of this tree
+would appear to be for the healing of the nations, for a
+decoction of them is regarded both as a preventive
+against and a cure for malaria; and a mopani poultice
+is a sovereign cure for bruises. Among the spoor on
+the track was that of a large lion going towards
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+Taqui. There were also to our surprise the spoor and
+droppings of oxen. When about eleven o&rsquo;clock we
+reached the large pits of whitey-blue brackish water
+which bear that name, we found the reason of both.
+A shooting party encamped there had had their cattle
+stampeded in the night, and early in the morning
+a Dutch hunter who accompanied them had gone out
+to look for them, and found an ox freshly killed by a
+lion not a quarter of a mile from the camp. He
+followed the lion, and wounded him with a long-range
+shot. When we arrived the search for the lion had
+begun, and he was found stone-dead a little way on,
+with his belly distended with ox-flesh and the bullet
+in his lungs. He was a very large lion, measuring
+about ten and a-half feet from tip to tip, rather old,
+and with broken porcupine-quills embedded in his
+skin. A trap-gun was set, and two nights later a
+very fine young black-maned lion, about the same
+size, was found dead a hundred yards from the trap,
+with a broken shoulder and a bullet in his spine. The
+remainder of the story shows the Providence which
+watches over foolish oxen. All were recovered save
+one, which died of red-water. They went straight
+back the road they had come; and though the
+country-side was infested with lions, wolves, and
+tiger-cats, they reached the mule-scherm at Brak
+River in safety.</p>
+
+<p>From Taqui the road climbs a chain of kopjes where
+it is almost overarched with trees, so that a covered
+waggon has difficulty in getting through. From the
+summit there is a long prospect of flat bush country
+running to the Limpopo, with a bold ridge of hills on
+the Rhodesian side, and far to the east the faint line of
+mountains which is the continuation of the Zoutpansberg
+to the Portuguese border. The bush was dotted
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+with huge baobabs, the cream-of-tartar trees which so
+impressed the voortrekkers in Lydenburg. At this
+season the branches were leafless, but a good deal of
+fruit remained, which our native boys eagerly gathered
+and munched for the rest of the journey. The fruit
+has a hard shell, and is filled with little white kernels
+like the sweetmeat called Turkish Delight. They
+have a faint sub-acid flavour, but otherwise are rather
+insipid. Their properties are highly salutary, and
+they are used to purify bad water and to keep the
+hunters&rsquo; blood clean in the absence of vegetable food.
+Their enormous trunks, often forty feet in circumference,
+are not wood but a sort of fibrous substance,
+so that a solid rifle bullet fired from short range will
+go through them. The baobab is indeed less a tree
+than a gigantic and salutary fungus; but in a distant
+prospect of landscape it has the scenic effect of large
+timber. An old Boer in the hunting party we had
+passed had given us an estimate of the distance to the
+next water; but, as it turned out, he was hopelessly
+wrong. It is nearly impossible to get a proper
+calculation of distance from country-people in South
+Africa. They are accustomed to calculate in hours,
+which of course vary in every district according to
+the nature of the road and the quality of the transport.
+Six miles an hour is the usual allowance; but
+when a Dutchman tries to calculate in miles he gets
+wildly out of his bearings. The hours method still
+sticks in their mind; and one man solemnly informed
+us that a certain place was six miles off for horses and
+ten for mules.</p>
+
+<p>We outspanned for the night without water, and
+with the accompaniment of scherm and camp fires.
+Next morning we came suddenly out of the bush to a
+perfect English dell, where a little clear stream, the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+first running water we had seen, flowed out of a reed-bed
+into a rock pool. There were a few large trees
+and quantities of a kind of small palm. Under the
+doubtful shade of a baobab we breakfasted, and then
+went up the stream with our rifles to look for game.
+There was the usual superfluity of birds, but we saw
+no big game except a few bush-hogs. The stream
+ceased as suddenly as it began, and we followed up a
+dry sandy bed all but overgrown with a thorn thicket.
+A mile or so up we came on another pool, which was
+evidently the drinking-place of the bush, for the edges
+were trodden with the spoor of pig and monkey and a
+few large buck. Pig drink during the day, but the
+large game come to the water early in the morning or
+very late in the evening, and in the heat of mid-day
+go many miles into the bush. It was a hot business
+ploughing along in the deep sand, and I was very glad
+to return to the rock-pool and a bath on a cool slab
+of stone. It is a good bush-veld rule to follow the
+advice of Mr Jorrocks and sleep where you eat, and
+in the shade of the waggon we dozed till the cooler
+afternoon. The evening trek was in the old thorn-country,
+perfectly featureless, silent, and uninhabited.
+Since Malietsie&rsquo;s location we had seen no Kaffirs except
+our own and the post-runners, and we were told
+that this whole tract of land is almost without natives.
+Even the water-holes, some of which are large and
+permanent, have failed to attract inhabitants. I am
+reminded of a story which has no application, but is
+worth recording. It was told to a burgher camp
+official by an old and deeply religious Boer, who was
+greatly pained at the experience. He fell asleep, he
+said, one night and dreamed; and, lo and behold, he
+was dead and at the gates of Paradise. An affable
+angel met him and conducted him to a place where
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+people were playing games and laughing loudly, and
+were generally consumed with energy and high spirits.
+&ldquo;This,&rdquo; said his guide, &ldquo;is the Rooinek heaven.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;No place for me,&rdquo; said the dreamer; &ldquo;these folk do
+not keep the Sabbath, and their noise wearies me.&rdquo;
+Then he came to another place where there was much
+beer and tobacco, and roysterers were swilling from
+long mugs and smoking deep-bowled pipes to the
+strains of a brass band. &ldquo;Again this intolerable
+row,&rdquo; said my friend, &ldquo;though the tobacco looks
+good&mdash;clearly the German paradise.&rdquo; The next place
+they came to was a town where thin-faced men were
+running about buying and selling and screeching
+market quotations. My friend would not at first
+believe that this was Paradise at all, but his informant
+said it was the corner reserved for virtuous
+Americans. &ldquo;Take me as soon as possible to the
+paradise of my own folk,&rdquo; said the dreamer; &ldquo;I am
+tired of these uitlander heavens.&rdquo; And then it seemed
+to him he was taken to a very beautiful country place,
+with rich green veld, seamed with water-furrows, and
+huge orchards of peaches and nartjes, and pleasant
+little houses with broad stoeps. The soul of my friend
+was ravished at the sight. Clearly, he thought, the
+Boers are God&rsquo;s chosen folk, and he was about to
+select his farm when a thought struck him. &ldquo;But
+where are all our people?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; said
+the affable angel, dropping a tear, &ldquo;it pains me to
+tell you that they are all in the Other Place.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Our evening outspan was below the kopjes where
+the copper mines lie, and a few tracks in the veld and
+an empty tin or two gave warning of human habitation.
+These copper mines, which are about to be
+thoroughly exploited by Johannesburg companies, are
+old Kaffir workings, and, possibly, from some of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+remains, Ph&oelig;nician. The scenery suddenly became
+very peculiar,&mdash;English park-land, but with a tint of
+green which I have never seen before, a kind of dull
+metallic shade like some mineral dye. There were
+avenues of tolerably high trees, and a sort of natural
+hedgerow. The grass was short and rich, and but for
+the odd hue not unlike a home meadow. There were
+also a number of wood-pigeons of the same metallic
+green, so that the whole place was a symphony in a
+not very pleasing colour. Early next morning, leaving
+our transport behind, we set off for the Limpopo, which
+is about eight miles off. The thorn thickets appeared
+again, and the heat as we descended into the valley
+became oppressive. The altitude of the river is about
+1500 feet, which is a descent of nearly 3000 feet from
+the high veld, and even in winter time the heat is
+considerable, for the soil is a fine sand, and no breeze
+penetrates to the wooded valley. I had seen the Limpopo
+a wild torrent in the passes of the Magaliesberg,
+and I had seen it a broad navigable river at its mouth;
+so I was scarcely prepared for the bed of dazzling
+white sand which here represented the stream. Main
+Drift is about a quarter of a mile wide, with a bed of
+bulrushes in the centre, and except for a thin trickle
+close to the Rhodesian shore it is as dry as the Egyptian
+desert. But twelve miles higher up it is a full stream
+with rapids and falls, crocodile and hippo, and some
+miles down it is a stagnant tropical lagoon. The water
+is there, but buried below Heaven knows how many feet
+of rock and sand. Those mysterious African rivers
+which disappear and return after many miles have a
+fascination for the mind which cares for the inexplicable.
+The valley is there, the bulrushes, the shingle,
+the water-birds, but no river&mdash;only a ribbon of white
+sand, or a few dusty holes in the rock. And then
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+without warning, as the traveller stumbles down the
+valley, water rises before him like a mirage, and instead
+of a desert he has a river-side. There is little
+kinship between the torrent which rushes through
+Crocodile Poort and this arid hollow, but the great
+river never loses itself, and though it is foiled and
+swamped and strained through sand it succeeds in
+the end, like Oxus in the poem, in collecting all its
+waters, and pours a stately flood through the low
+coast-lands to the ocean. Ploughing about in the dry
+bed under the tropical noontide sun was dreary work,
+and put us very much in the position of Mr Pliable in
+the Slough of Despond, when he cried, &ldquo;May I get out
+again with my life, you shall possess the brave country
+alone for me.&rdquo; We saw a number of spur-winged
+geese, which for some reason the Boers call wild
+Muscovy, and a heron or two sailing down the blue.
+A little up stream there was a lagoon in the sand
+flanked on one side by rocks&mdash;a clear deep pool, where
+a man might bathe without fear of strange beasts.
+Wallowing in the lukewarm water, the glare exceeded
+anything I have known&mdash;blue water, white rock, and
+acres and acres of white sand between hot copper-coloured
+hills.</p>
+
+<p>As we left the river we said farewell to the Road.
+It showed itself on the Rhodesian side climbing a
+knoll past a cluster of huts which had once been a
+police station, but had been relinquished because of the
+great mortality from fever. Thereafter it was lost
+among bush and a chain of broken hills. It cared
+nothing for appearances, being sandy and overgrown
+and in places scarcely a track at all, for it had a weary
+way to go before it could be called a civilised road
+again. There was something purposeful and gallant
+in the little trail plunging into the wilds, and with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+regret we took our last look of it and turned our faces
+southwards.</p>
+
+<p>Our way back lay mostly through dense bush-land,
+and in the days of hunting and the evenings round the
+fire I saw much of the life and realised something of
+the fascination of this strange form of country. It has
+no obvious picturesqueness, this interminable desert of
+thorn and sand and rank grass, varied at rare intervals
+by a raw kopje or a clump of timber. The sun beats
+on it at mid-day with pitiless force, and if it was hot
+in the month of August, what must it be at midsummer?
+The rivers are sand-filled ditches, and the
+infrequent water is found commonly in brack lagoons;
+but, dry as it is, it has none of the wholesomeness of
+most arid countries, generally forming a hotbed of
+fever. An aneroid which I carried to give a flavour
+of science to our expedition, put its average elevation
+at between 1500 and 2000 feet. Agriculture
+is everywhere impossible, though some of the better
+timbered parts might make good winter ranching
+country. But, apart from possible mineral exploitation,
+the land must remain hunting veld, and indeed
+is favourably placed for a large-game preserve. The
+very scarcity of water makes it a suitable dwelling-place
+for the larger buck, who drink but once a-day;
+and the difficulty of penetrating such a desert will be
+an effective agent in preservation. A man walking
+through it sees nothing for days beyond the dead
+green of thorn bush, till he comes to some slight ridge
+and overlooks a round horizon, a plain flat as mid-ocean,
+crisped with the same monotonous dwarf trees.
+Hidden away round water-holes there are glades and
+drives with a faint hint of that softness which to us is
+inseparable from woodland scenery, but they are so few
+that they only increase by contrast the sense of hard
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+desolation. The bush is very silent. Its dwellers make
+no noise as they move about, till evening brings the cries
+of beasts of prey. The nights in winter are intensely
+cold, with a sharpness which I found more difficult to
+endure than the honest frost of the high veld. The
+noons are dusty and torrid, and the thirst of the bush
+is a thing not easily coped with. But in three phases
+this desert took on a curious charm. That South
+African landscape must be bleak indeed which is not
+transformed by the mornings and evenings. For two
+hours after sunrise a chill hangs in the air, light fresh
+winds blow from nowhere, and the scrub which is so
+dead and ugly at mid-day assumes clear colours and
+stands out olive-green and rich umber against the pale
+sky. At twilight the wonderful amethyst haze turns
+everything to fairyland, the track shimmers among
+purple shadows, and every little gap in the bush is
+magnified to a glade in a forest. I have also a very
+vivid memory of a view from one of the small ridges
+in full moonlight. It was like looking from a hill-top
+on a vast virgin forest, a dark symmetrical ocean of
+tree-tops with a glimpse of ivory from an open space
+where the road emerged for a moment from the
+covert.</p>
+
+<p>There is little danger in hunting here unless you
+are happy enough to meet a lion and so unfortunate
+as not to kill with the first shot. But it is very
+arduous and hot, the clothes become pincushions of
+thorns, face and hands are scratched violently with
+swinging boughs, and a man&rsquo;s temper is apt to get
+brittle at times. In thick bush one can only hunt by
+spoor, and it is a slow business with a grilling sun on
+one&rsquo;s back and a few obtuse native boys. The native
+is usually a good tracker, but he is an unsatisfactory
+colleague because of the difficulty of communicating
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+with him. For one thing, even in a language which
+he understands, he does not seem to know the meaning
+of the note of interrogation. If he is asked if a certain
+mark is a black wildebeest&rsquo;s spoor, he imagines that
+his master asserts that such is the case, and politely
+hastens to agree with him, whereas he knows perfectly
+well that it is not, and if he understood that
+he was being asked for information, would give it
+willingly. The difficulty, too, of hunting by a kind
+of rude instinct is that when this instinct is at fault
+he is left utterly helpless, and has no notion of any
+sort of deductive reasoning. If a native is once lost
+he is thoroughly lost, though his knowledge of the
+country may enable him to keep alive when a white
+man would die. I found also that my boys had so
+many errands of their own to do in the bush that
+it was difficult to keep them to their work. They
+scrambled for baobab fruit; they hunted for wolves&rsquo;
+and lions&rsquo; dung, from which they make an ointment,
+smeared with which they imagine they can safely
+walk through the bush at all seasons. The supreme
+danger of this kind of life is undoubtedly to be lost
+away from water and tracks. It is a misfortune
+which any man may suffer, but for any one with
+some experience of savage country, who takes his
+bearings carefully at the start and never gets out
+of touch with them, the danger is very small. In
+this country there is always some landmark&mdash;a kopje,
+a big tree, and in some parts the distant ranges of
+mountains&mdash;by which, with the sun and some knowledge
+of the lie of the land, one can safely travel
+many miles from the camp. For a man on a good
+horse there is no excuse, here at any rate, for losing
+himself; for a man on foot heat and fatigue and the
+closeness of the bush may well drive all calculations
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+out of his head. Apart from other terrors, a night in
+those wilds is likely to be disturbed from the attentions
+of beasts of prey, and a man who has not the
+means of making a scherm or a fire will have to spend
+a restless night in a tree. To be finally and hopelessly
+lost is the most awful fate which I can imagine.
+It is easy to conjure up the details, and many uneasy
+nights I have spent in such dismal forecasts. First,
+the annoyance, the hasty pushing through the scrub,
+believing the camp to be just in front, and lamenting
+that you are late for dinner. Then the slow fatigue,
+the slow consciousness that the camp is not there, that
+you do not know where you are, and that you must
+make the best of the night in the open. Morning
+comes, and confidently you try to take your bearings;
+by this time others are seeking you, you reflect, and
+with a little care you can find your whereabouts and
+go to meet them. Then a long hot day, without
+water or food, pushing eternally through the dull
+green scrub, every moment leaving confidence a little
+weaker, till the second night comes, and you doze
+uneasily in a horror of nightmare and physical illness.
+Then the spectral awaking, the watching of a giddy
+sunrise, the slow forcing of the body to the same hopeless
+quest, till the thorns begin to dance before you
+and the black froth comes to the lips, and in a little
+reason takes wing, and you die crazily by inches in
+the parched silence.</p>
+
+<p>I have said that the bush is without human inhabitants,
+but every now and then we found traces
+of other travellers. A dusty pack-donkey would
+suddenly emerge from the thicket, followed by two
+dusty and sunburnt men, each with some prehistoric
+kind of gun. Sometimes we breakfasted with this
+kind of party, and heard from them the curious tale
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+of their wanderings. They would ask us the news,
+having seen no white man for half a-year, and it was
+odd to see the voracity with which they devoured the
+very belated papers we could offer them. They had
+been east to the Portuguese border and west to
+Bechuanaland and north to the Zambesi, pursuing
+one of the hardest and most thankless tasks on
+earth. The prospector skirmishes ahead of civilisation.
+On his labours great industries are based, but
+he himself gets, as a rule, little reward. Fever and
+starvation are incidents of his daily life, and yet
+there is a certain relish in it for the old stager, and I
+doubt if he would be content to try an easier job
+which curtailed his freedom. For, if you think of
+it, there is an undercurrent of perpetual excitement
+in the life, which is treasure-hunting made a business:
+any morning may reveal the great reef or the rich
+pipe, and change this dusty fellow with his tired mules
+into a nabob. Among the taciturn men who crept
+out of the bush every type was represented, from
+Australian cow-punchers to well-born gentlemen from
+home, whose names were still on the lists of good
+clubs. One party I especially remember, three huge
+Canadians, who came in the darkness and encamped
+by our fire. They had a ramshackle cart and two
+mules, and the whole outfit was valeted by the very
+smallest nigger-boy you can imagine. It did one good
+to see the way in which that child sprang to attention
+at sunrise, and, clad simply in a gigantic pair of khaki
+trousers and one side of an old waistcoat, lit the fire,
+made coffee for his three masters, cooked breakfast,
+caught and harnessed the mules, and was squatting
+in the cart, all within the shortest possible time. The
+Canadians had been all over the world and in every
+profession, but of all trades they liked the late war
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+best, and made anxious inquiries about Somaliland.
+They were the true adventurer type,&mdash;long, thin,
+hollow-eyed, tough as whipcord, men who, like the
+Black Douglas, would rather hear the lark sing than
+the mouse cheep. After making fierce inroads on my
+tobacco, and giving me their views on the native question
+and many incidental matters, they departed into
+the Western bush, one man cracking the whip and
+whistling &ldquo;Annie Laurie,&rdquo; and the other two, with
+guns, creeping along on the flanks. I took off my
+hat in spirit to the advance-guard of our people, the
+men who know much and fear little, who are always
+a little ahead of everybody else in the waste places of
+the earth. You can readily whistle them back to the
+defence of some portion of the Empire or gather them
+for the maintenance of some single frontier; but when
+the work is done they retire again to their own places,
+with their eyes steadfastly to the wilds but their ears
+always open for the whistle to call them back once
+more.</p>
+
+<p class="date"><i>August 1903.</i></p>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XI.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE FUTURE OF SOUTH AFRICAN SPORT.</h4>
+
+<p>The great days of South African sport are over,
+and there is no disguising the fact. Open any early
+record, such as Oswell or Gordon-Cumming, and the
+size and variety of the bag dazzles the mind of the
+amateur of to-day. Then it was possible to shoot
+lion in Cape Colony and elephant in the Transvaal,
+and to find at one&rsquo;s door game whose only habitat is
+now some narrow region near the Mountains of the
+Moon. Turn even to the later pages of Mr Selous,
+and anywhere north of a line drawn east and west
+through Pretoria, there was such sport to be had as
+can now be found with difficulty on the Zambesi. The
+absence of game laws and the presence of many bold
+hunters have cleared the veld of the vast herds of
+antelope which provided the voortrekker with fresh
+meat, and the advance of industry and settlement
+have driven predatory animals still farther afield.
+From the Zambesi southward ten or twelve species
+of antelope may still be found in fair numbers, but
+the nobler and larger kinds of game, the giraffe, the
+koodoo, the black wildebeest, the two hartebeests, and
+the eland, are scarce save in a few remote valleys.
+The white rhinoceros is almost extinct and the ordinary
+kind uncommon. The hippopotamus, which is not
+a sporting animal, is still found in most tropical rivers;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+wild pigs&mdash;both bush-hog and wart-hog&mdash;are plentiful
+in the northern bush; but the graceful zebra is rapidly
+disappearing. Lion are still fairly easy to come on
+unawares anywhere north of the Limpopo, and in the
+mountains and flats of the north-eastern Transvaal.
+A few troops of elephant may exist unpreserved in the
+region between the Pungwe and the Zambesi, a few
+in Northern Mashonaland, with perhaps one or two in
+the Northern Kalahari. The war, on the whole, has
+been on the side of the wild animals, for though large
+herds of springbok and blesbok were slaughtered by
+the troops on the high veld, the native, that inveterate
+poacher, has been restrained from his evil ways
+by lucrative military employment, so that the northern
+districts are better stocked to-day than they were
+five years ago. But the fact remains that South
+Africa is no longer virgin hunting-veld. The game
+is disappearing, and, unless every care is taken, will
+in a few years go the way of the American buffalo.
+If we are to preserve for South Africa its oldest inhabitants,
+and keep it as a hunting-ground for the true
+sportsman, we must bestir ourselves and act promptly.
+In this, as in graver questions, an intelligent forethought
+must take the place of the old slackness.</p>
+
+<p>Such a policy must take two forms,&mdash;the establishment
+of good laws for the preservation of game and
+the regulation of sport, and the formation of game-reserves.
+The best course would have been to declare
+a rigid close time for five years, during which
+no game other than birds and destructive animals
+should be killed, save in the case of damage to crops.
+The administrative difficulties, however, in the way
+of such a heroic remedy were very great, and the code
+of game laws, now in force in the Transvaal, seems to
+mark the limit of possible restriction. Under these
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+power is given to declare a close season&mdash;a valuable
+discretionary power, since the season varies widely
+for different kinds of game&mdash;during which no game
+may be killed, and also to preserve absolutely any
+specified bird or animal in any specified district up to
+a period of three years. This would permit the absolute
+preservation of such animals as the springbok
+and the blesbok in certain parts of the country where
+they are scarce, without interfering with sport in
+other localities where they are plentiful. The ordinary
+shooting licence for birds and antelope is fixed at
+£3 for the season; but certain rarer animals have
+been made special game, and to hunt these permission
+must be obtained in writing from the Colonial Secretary
+and a fee paid of £25. The chief of these are
+the elephant, hippo, rhinoceros, buffalo; the quagga
+and the zebra; the two hartebeests, the two wildebeests,
+the roan and the sable antelope, the koodoo,
+eland, giraffe, and tsessabe. The wild ostrich and
+that beautiful bird the mahem or crested crane
+(<i>Chrysopelargus balearica</i>) are also included. Provision
+is made against the sale or destruction of the
+eggs of game-birds and the sale of dead game in the
+close season. Under this law the ordinary man, on the
+payment of a small sum, has during the season the
+right to shoot over thirty varieties of game-birds and
+over a dozen kinds of buck, as well as wild pig and lion
+and tiger-cats, if he is fortunate enough to find them,
+on most Crown lands and on private lands when he
+can get the owner&rsquo;s permission,&mdash;a tolerably wide field
+for the sportsman. But restrictive laws are not enough
+in themselves; it is necessary to provide an equivalent
+to the sanctuary in a deer-forest, reserves where
+wild animals are immune at all seasons. The late
+Government established several nominal reserves,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+notably on the Lesser Sabi River and in the extreme
+eastern corner of Piet Retief which adjoins Tongaland;
+but no proper steps were taken to enforce the reservations.
+The new Government has strictly delimited
+the Sabi preserve and appointed a ranger; and certain
+adjoining land companies between the Sabi and the
+Olifants have made similar provisions for their own
+land. But one reserve in one locality is not enough.
+The true principle is to establish a small reserve and
+a sanctuary in each district. Part of the Crown lands
+in Northern Rustenburg, in Waterberg, in Northern
+and Eastern Zoutpansberg, and especially in the
+Springbok Flats district, might well be formed into
+reserves without any real injury to such agricultural
+and pastoral development as they are capable
+of. If the greater land companies could be induced
+to follow suit&mdash;and there is no reason why they
+should not&mdash;an effective and far-reaching system of
+game preservation could be put in force.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> Finally,
+something must be done at once to stop native poaching,
+more especially the depredations of the wretched
+Kaffir dogs. Officers of constabulary, land inspectors,
+as well as all owners and lessees of farms, should have
+the power to shoot at sight any dog trespassing on
+a game-preserve or detected in the pursuit of game.
+An increased dog-tax, too, might stop the present
+system of large mongrel packs which are to be seen
+in any Kaffir kraal. A stringent Vermin Act, which
+is highly necessary for the protection of small stock
+like sheep and goats, would also help to prevent the
+slaughter of buck by wild dogs and jackals.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+But for the big-game hunter, in the old African
+sense, there is little or nothing left. The day of
+small things has arisen, and we must be content to
+record tamely our sport in braces of birds and heads
+of small buck, where our grandfathers recorded theirs
+in lion-skins and tusks and broken limbs. Big game
+there still is, but they are far afield, and have to be
+pursued at some risk to horse and man from fly
+and malaria. The lion, as I have said, is still fairly
+common in the district between Magatoland and the
+Limpopo, in the continuation of the Zoutpansberg
+east to the Rooi Rand, down the slopes of the
+Lebombo, and in the flats along the Lower Letaba,
+Olifants, and Limpopo. He is frequently met with
+in most parts of Rhodesia, though his habits are
+highly capricious, and while a tourist one day&rsquo;s
+journey from Salisbury may see several, a man who
+spends six months hunting may never get a shot.
+Portuguese territory is still a haunt of big game,
+though the natives are doing their best to exterminate
+it, for the thick bush and the pestilent
+climate between the Lebombo and the sea will
+always make hunting difficult; and the Pungwe
+and its tributaries still form, at the proper season,
+perhaps the best shooting-ground south of the Zambesi.
+The elephant cannot be counted a quarry; and
+any man who attempts to kill an elephant in South
+Africa to-day deserves severe treatment, save in such
+preserves as the Addo Bush and the Knysna forest
+in Cape Colony, where they are rapidly becoming
+a nuisance. A few head of buffalo still survive, in
+spite of rinderpest, in the extreme Eastern Transvaal,
+as well as in Portuguese territory; and the
+eland, that noblest and largest of buck, is found
+along the Portuguese border. Report has it that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+in some of the Drakensberg kloofs between Basutoland
+and Natal a few stray eland may also be found.
+The beautiful antelopes, sable and roan, the exquisite
+koodoo, the blue wildebeest and the two hartebeests,
+roam in small herds on the malarial eastern flats,
+and a few giraffe are reported from the same
+neighbourhood. The gemsbok, with his lengthy taper
+horns, has long been confined to the remote parts
+of the Kalahari.</p>
+
+<p>A big-game expedition will, therefore, in a few
+years&rsquo; time still be a possibility in Central South
+Africa, and with judicious management it may long
+remain so, for those who can afford the time and
+the not inconsiderable expense. The best place must
+remain the country between the Lebombo and the
+Drakensberg, and north from the Olifants to the
+Limpopo. Eastern Mashonaland, the Kalahari, and
+the Pungwe district will be available for those who
+care to go farther afield. The venue must be chosen
+according as a man proposes to hunt on horse or
+on foot. Both forms of sport have their attractions.
+On the great open flats of the Kalahari and Rhodesia
+no sport in the world can equal the pursuit of big
+game with a trained horse&mdash;the wild gallop, stalking,
+so to speak, at racing speed, the quick dismounting
+and firing, the pursuit of a maimed animal, the
+imminent danger, perhaps, from a charging buffalo
+or a wounded lion. This horseback hunting is, as
+a rule, pursued in a healthy country, every moment
+is full of breathless excitement, and success requires
+a steady nerve and a sure seat. But stalking on
+foot in thick bush makes greater demands on bodily
+strength and self-possession. The country is rarely
+wholesome, and in those blazing flats a long daylight
+stalk will tire the strongest. There is more
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+need, too, for veld-craft, and an intimate knowledge
+of the habits of game; and when game is found,
+there is more need for a clear eye and a steady
+pulse, for a man hunting in veldschoen and a shirt
+is pretty well at the mercy of a mad animal. But
+in both forms of sport there is the same lonely freedom,
+the same wonderful earth, and the same homely
+and intimate comforts. No man can ever forget the
+return, utterly tired, in the cool dusk, which is alive
+with the glimmer of wings, and the sight of the
+waggon-lantern and the great fire at which the boys
+are cooking dinner. A wash and a drink&mdash;indispensable
+after a hot day lest a man should overstay his
+appetite; and then a hunter&rsquo;s meal, which tastes as
+the cookery of civilisation seldom tastes. There is
+no reason why a hunter should not live well, far
+better than in any South African town, for he can
+count on fresh meat always, and, if he is fortunate,
+on eggs and fish and fruit. And then the evening
+pipe in a deck-chair, with the big lantern swinging
+from a tree, the great fire making weird shadows
+in the forest, and natives chattering drowsily around
+the ashes. Lastly, to an early bed in his blankets,
+and up again at dawn, with another day before him
+of this sane and wholesome life.</p>
+
+<p>The chief dangers in African hunting, greater far
+than any from wild animals, are the chances of malaria
+and the possibility of getting lost. In many trips
+the first may be absent, but for a keen man it is
+often necessary to time his expeditions when the
+grass is short or when he has a chance of having
+the field to himself, periods which do not always
+coincide with the healthy season. It is not for anyone
+to venture lightly on a long hunting trek. But,
+granted a sound constitution, decent carefulness in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+matters such as the abstinence from all liquids save
+at meals, and from alcohol save before dinner, and
+the rigorous use of a mosquito-curtain, can generally
+bring a man safely through. The system can be
+fortified by small and regular doses of quinine, and
+the camp should be pitched, whenever possible, in
+some dry and open spot. These may seem foolish
+precautions to an old hunter whose body has been
+seasoned with innumerable attacks, but it is wise
+for one who has not suffered that misfortune to take
+every means to avoid it. To be lost in the bush is
+an accident which every man is horribly afraid of,
+and which may happen any day even to the most
+cautious, unless he has gone far in the curious lore
+of the wilds. There are men, of course, who are
+beyond the fear of it, chosen spirits to whom a
+featureless plain is full of intricate landmarks, and
+the sky is a clearer chart than any map. But the
+common traveller may walk a score of yards or so
+from the path, look round, see all about him high
+waving grasses somewhere in which the road is
+hidden, go off hastily in what seems the right direction,
+walk for a couple of hours and change his mind,
+and then, lo! and behold, his nerve goes and he is
+lost, perhaps for days, perhaps for ever. The ordinary
+procedure of a hunting trip, tossing for beats in the
+morning and then scattering each in a different direction,
+gives scope for such misfortunes. The safest
+plan is, of course, never to go out without a competent
+native guide; and, where this precaution is
+out of the question, the next best is to rely absolutely
+on some experienced member of the party who can
+follow spoor, sit down once you have lost your bearings,
+and wait till he finds you. A time is fixed
+after which, if a man does not return, it is presumed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+that he is in difficulties, and a search party is sent
+out; and naturally it saves a great deal of trouble
+if a man does not confuse the searchers by constantly
+going back on his tracks. If the hunter is on horseback
+he can try trusting his horse, which is said&mdash;I
+have happily never had occasion to prove the truth
+of the saying&mdash;to be able on the second day to go
+back to its last water. The whole hunting veld is
+full of gruesome tales of men utterly lost or found
+too late; and most hunting parties in flat or thickly
+wooded country come back with a wholesome dread
+of the mischances of the bush.</p>
+
+<p>For the man who has little time to spare there
+remain the smaller buck. And such game is not to
+be lightly despised. The commonest and smallest are
+the little duiker and steinbok, shy, fleet little creatures
+which give many a sporting shot and make excellent
+eating. I suppose there are few farms in any part of
+South Africa without a few of them, and in some
+districts they are nearly as common as hares on
+an English estate. The springbok, a true gazelle, is
+more local in his occurrence, though large herds still
+exist in Cape Colony and parts of the Orange River
+Colony. Fair-sized herds are to be found, too, in the
+western district of the Transvaal and in certain parts
+of Waterberg and Ermelo. The blesbok is rather less
+frequent, though he used to be common enough, but
+there are numerous small herds in various parts of
+the country. These four varieties are the stand-by of
+South African shooting: other buck are to be sought
+more as trophies than in the ordinary way of sport.
+The water-buck, with his handsome head, and extremely
+poor venison, is common along all the sub-tropical
+and tropical rivers, but to shoot him requires
+a certain amount of trekking. So with the reed-buck,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+who haunts the same localities, though he is still
+found in places so close to the high veld as the
+southern parts of Marico and the Amsterdam district
+in the east. The beautiful impala, with his reddish
+coat and delicately notched antlers, is the commonest
+buck in the Sabi game-preserves, and extends over
+most of the bush veld, as well as parts of Waterberg
+and a few farms in the south-east. The klipspringer
+is found on all the slopes of the great eastern range
+of mountains, and is very common on the Natal side
+of the Drakensberg. He is a beautiful and difficult
+quarry, having a chamois-like love of inaccessible
+places, and being able to cover the most appalling
+ground at racing speed. The vaal rhebok and the
+rooi rhebok are found in small numbers in the same
+localities, and the latter is also fairly common in the
+wooded hills around Zeerust. Both the bush-pig and
+the wart-hog are plentiful in the bush veld, and on
+the slopes of the eastern mountains. Finally, the
+bush-buck, one of the most beautiful, and, for his size,
+the fiercest of all buck, is widely distributed among
+the woods of Cape Colony and Natal, and in the belts
+of virgin forest which extend with breaks from Swaziland
+to Zoutpansberg. Living in the dense undergrowth,
+he has been pretty well out of the way of the
+hunter who killed for the pot. He is an awkward
+fellow to meet at close quarters in a bad country, for,
+when wounded, he will charge, and his powerful horns
+are not pleasant to encounter. There have been
+several cases of natives, and even of white men, who
+have died of wounds from his assaults. His elder
+brother, the inyala, does not, so far as I know, appear
+south of the Limpopo.</p>
+
+<p>The favourite South African method of shooting
+such game as the springbok is by driving him with an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+army of native beaters down wind against the guns.
+In an open country buck can be stalked on horseback
+or ridden down in the Dutch fashion of &ldquo;brandt.&rdquo;
+Elsewhere stalking on foot is the only way, a difficult
+matter unless the hunter knows the habits and haunts
+of the game. South African shooting seems hard at
+first to the new-comer, partly from the difficulty of
+judging distances in the novel clearness of the air,
+partly from the shyness of game, which often makes
+it necessary to take shots at a range which seems
+ridiculous to one familiar only with Scots deer-stalking,
+and partly from the extraordinary tenacity of life
+which those wild animals show,<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> limiting the choice
+of marks to a very few parts of the body. But experience
+can do much, and in time any man with a
+clear eye and good nerve may look for reasonable
+success. As has been noted in a former chapter, the
+best shots in the country, with a few exceptions, are
+to be found among English immigrants and Colonists
+of English blood. It is a kind of shooting which
+seems incredible at first sight to the ordinary man
+from home. I have known such a hunter to put a
+bullet at over 100 yards through the head of a
+korhaan, a bird scarcely larger than a blackcock: a
+feat which might be set down to accident were it not
+that the same man was accustomed to shoot small
+buck running at 200 yards with remarkable success.
+I should be very sorry to wage war against a corps of
+sharpshooters drawn from old African hunters.</p>
+
+<p>There remain the numerous game-birds of the
+country. The finest is, of course, the greater paauw,
+but he is not very common in the Transvaal itself,
+though frequent enough in Bechuanaland, Rhodesia,
+and some parts of the northern bush veld. But of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+bustard family, to which the comprehensive name of
+korhaan is applied, there are at least four varieties,
+two of which are very common. The bustard is an
+easy bird, save that he carries a good deal of shot, and
+has a knack of keeping out of range unless properly
+stalked or driven. The Dutch word &ldquo;patrys,&rdquo; again,
+covers at least eight varieties of the true partridge,
+and if we include the sand-grouse (called the Namaqua
+partridge), of two or three more. None of the South
+African partridge tribe are equal to their English
+brothers; but there is no reason why the English bird
+should not be introduced, and thrive well, and indeed
+experiments in this direction are being made. There
+are three birds which the Dutch call &ldquo;pheasant,&rdquo; two
+of them francolins and one the curious dikkop&mdash;birds
+which have few of the qualities of the English
+pheasant, but which are strong on the wing, offer
+fair shots, and make excellent eating. Quail are
+found at certain seasons of the year in vast quantities,
+and give good sport with dogs; but to my mind the
+finest South African bird, excepting of course the
+greater paauw, is the guinea-fowl, which the Dutch
+call by the quaint and beautiful name of <i>tarentaal</i>.
+There are two varieties, fairly well distributed&mdash;the
+ordinary crested (<i>Numida coronata</i>) and the blue-headed
+(<i>Numida Edouardi</i>). In parts of the bush
+veld they may be seen roosting at night on trees so
+thickly that the branches are bent with their weight.
+When pursued in broken country, what with dodging
+among stones and trees and his short unexpected
+flight, the guinea-fowl offers some excellent shooting,
+and as a table-bird he is not easy to beat. Wildfowl
+are an uncertain quantity on the uplands, though very
+common nearer the coast. They do not come to the
+rivers, but, on the other hand, they frequent in great
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+numbers farm dams and the pans and lakes of Standerton
+and Ermelo. What the Dutch call specifically
+the &ldquo;wilde gans&rdquo; is the Egyptian goose; but several
+other varieties, including the spur-winged, are to be
+found. There are some ten kinds of duck, but it
+would be difficult to say which is the commonest, as
+they vary in different districts. The Dutch call a
+bird &ldquo;teel&rdquo; which is not the true teal, but the variety
+known as the Cape teal (<i>Nettion capense</i>), though
+there is more than one kind of proper teal to be met
+with. There is a black duck, a variety of pochard, a
+variety of shoveller, and a kind of shell-duck which is
+known as the mountain duck (<i>bergeend</i>). Wild pigeons
+exist in endless quantities; and I must not omit the
+pretty spur-winged plover, which cries all day long on
+the western veld, or that most cosmopolitan of birds,
+the snipe. Along the reed-beds of the Limpopo, in
+the bulrushes which fringe the pans in Ermelo, by
+every spruit and dam, you may put up precisely the
+same fellow that you shoot in Hebridean peat-mosses
+or on Swedish lakes, or along the canals of Lower
+Egypt. The little brown long-billed bird has annihilated
+time and space and taken the whole world for
+his home.</p>
+
+<p>There is need of some little care lest we drive the
+wild birds altogether away from the neighbourhood of
+the towns. They are still plentiful, but, if over-shot,
+they change their quarters; and people complain that
+whereas five years ago they could get excellent shooting
+within three miles of their door, they have now to
+content themselves with a few stragglers. It is for
+the owners of land to see that its denizens are properly
+protected, for the disappearance of big game is an
+awful warning not to presume on present abundance.
+Some day we may hope to see the country farmer as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+eager to preserve his game as he is now to destroy it.
+There needs but the pinch of scarcity and the growth
+of a market value for shooting to turn the present
+free-and-easy ways into a perhaps too rigorous protective
+system.</p>
+
+<p>There remain two sports which are still in their
+infancy in the country and deserve serious development&mdash;the
+keeping of harriers and angling. I say
+harriers advisedly, for though it would be better to
+stick to drafts from foxhound packs because of the
+greater strength and hardiness of the hounds, yet
+the sport can never fairly be dignified by the name
+of fox-hunting. The quarries will be the hare, the
+small buck, and in certain districts the jackal. The
+veld in parts is a fine natural hunting-ground, and
+the hazards, which will be wanting in the shape of
+hedges and banks, will exist very really in ant-bear
+holes and dongas. As the fencing laws take effect
+there will be wire to go over for those who have
+Australian nerves. The Afrikander pony is an animal
+born for the work, and once harrier packs were established
+there is every reason to believe that the Dutch
+farmers would join in the sport. The only two
+reasons I have ever heard urged against the proposal
+are&mdash;first, that hounds when brought out to South
+Africa lose their noses; and, second, that it would be
+hard to get a good scent in the dry air of the veld.
+The first is true in a sense, but only because a draft
+brought out from home is usually set to work at once
+and not acclimatised gradually to the change of air.
+There is no inherent impossibility in keeping a dog&rsquo;s
+nose good, as is shown by the many excellent setters
+and pointers that have been imported. In any case,
+if the master of harriers breeds carefully he ought in
+a few years to get together a thoroughly acclimatised
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+pack. As for the matter of scent, there is no denying
+that it would not lie on the ordinary hot dry day,
+but this only means that it will not be possible to
+hunt all the year round. I can imagine no better
+weather than the cool moist days which are common
+on the high veld in autumn and early spring, and
+even in summer the mornings up to ten o&rsquo;clock are
+cool enough for the purpose. South African hunts
+must follow the Indian fashion, and when they cannot
+get whole days for their sport make the best of the
+early hours.</p>
+
+<p>Fishing, I am afraid, has been in the past a
+neglected sport. The Boer left it to the Kaffir, and
+the uitlander had better things to think about. Had
+the land possessed any native fish of the type of
+the American brook-trout or the land-locked salmon,
+perhaps it would have been different; but in the
+high-veld streams the only notable fish are two species
+of carp, known as yellow-fish and white-fish, which
+run from 2 lb. to 6 lb., and the barbel, which may weigh
+anything up to 30 lb.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> There are also eels, which may
+be disregarded. I do not think these South African
+fish are to be despised, for though they may be dead-hearted
+compared with a trout or a salmon, they give
+better sport than English coarse fish, and the barbel
+is quite as good as a pike. The ordinary bait is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+mealie-meal paste, a locust or any kind of small
+animal, a phantom minnow, and even a piece of
+bright rag. I have known both kinds of carp take
+a brightly coloured sea-trout fly, and give the angler
+a very good run for his pains. But the great South
+African fish is the tiger-fish, confined, unhappily, to
+sub-tropical rivers and malarial country. He is not
+unlike a trout in appearance, save for his fierce head,
+which suggests the <i>Salmo ferox</i>. In any of the
+eastern rivers&mdash;Limpopo, Letaba, Olifants, Sabi,
+Crocodile, Komati, Usutu, Umpilusi&mdash;he is the chief&mdash;indeed,
+so far as I could judge, the only&mdash;fish,
+and he is one of the most spirited of his tribe. He
+will readily take an artificial minnow, and also, I
+am told, a large salmon fly, but the tackle must be
+at least as strong as for pike, for his formidable teeth
+will shear through any ordinary casting line. His
+average weight is perhaps about 10 lb., though he
+has been caught up to 30 lb., but it is not his size
+so much as his extraordinary fierceness and dash
+which makes him attractive. When hooked he leaps
+from the water like a clean salmon, and for an hour
+or more he may lead the perspiring fisherman as
+pretty a dance as he could desire. If any one is
+inclined to think angling a tame sport, I can recommend
+this experiment. Let him go out on some
+river like the Komati on a stifling December day,
+when the sky is brass above and not a breath of air
+breaks the stillness, in one of the leaky and crazy
+cobles of those parts. Let him hook and land a
+tiger-fish of 20 lb., at the imminent risk of capsizing
+and joining the company of the engaging crocodiles,
+or, when he has grassed the fish, of having a finger
+bitten off by his iron teeth, and then, I think, he
+will admit, so far as his scanty breath will allow him,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+that an hour&rsquo;s fishing may afford all the excitement
+which an average man can support.</p>
+
+<p>So much for the fish of the country. But Central
+South Africa affords a magnificent field for the introduction
+and acclimatisation of the greatest of sporting
+fish. Ceylon and New Zealand have already shown
+what can be done with the trout in new waters, and
+in Cape Colony and Natal the same experiment has
+been made with much success. The high veld is only
+less good than New Zealand as a home for trout. To
+be sure, there is no snow-water, but there is the next
+best thing in water whose temperature varies very
+little all the year round. The ordinary sluggish
+spruits are of course unsuitable, but the mountain
+burns in the east and north are perfect natural trout-streams,
+with clear cold water, abundant fall, gravel
+bottoms, and all the feeding which the most gluttonous
+of fish could desire. The Transvaal Trout
+Acclimatisation Society, founded in Johannesburg in
+1902, has established a hatchery on the Mooi River
+above Potchefstroom, and is making the most praiseworthy
+efforts, by the creation of local committees,
+to excite a general interest in the work throughout
+the country. It will still be some years before any
+trout-stream can be stocked and thrown open to
+anglers; but there is no reason why in time there
+should not be one in most districts. The Mooi and
+the Klip rivers near Johannesburg, the Magalies and
+the Hex rivers in Rustenburg, the Upper Malmani in
+Lichtenburg, every stream in Magatoland and the
+Wood Bush, the torrents which fall from Lydenburg
+into the flats, and all the many mountain streams
+which run into Swaziland from the high veld, may yet
+be as good trout-waters as any in Lochaber. The
+rainbow and the Lochleven trout will be the staple
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+importation; but in some of the larger streams experiments
+might be made with the American ouananiche
+and the Danubian huchen. It is difficult to exaggerate
+the service which might thus be rendered to
+the country. If in the dams and streams within
+easy distance of the towns a sound form of sport
+can be provided at reasonable cost, the first and
+greatest of the amenities of life will have been
+introduced. At present on the Rand there are no
+proper modes of relaxation: most men work till
+they drop, and then take their jaded holiday in
+Europe. Yet how many, if they had the chance,
+would go off from Saturday to Monday with their
+rods, and find by the stream-side the old healing
+quiet of nature?</p>
+
+<p>There is a future for South African sport if South
+Africa is alive to her opportunity. It is a country of
+sportsmen, and sport with the better sort of man is a
+sound basis of friendship. Game Preservation Societies
+are being started in many districts, and when we find
+the two races united in a common purpose, which
+touches not politics or dogma but the primitive
+instincts of humankind, something will have been
+done towards unity. The matter is equally important
+from the standpoint of game protection. The private
+landowner can do more than the land company, and
+the land company can do more than the Government,
+towards ensuring the future of sport. Many Dutch
+farmers have preserved in the past, and a general
+extension of this spirit would work wonders in a few
+years. Vanishing species would be saved, banished
+game would return, and our conscience would be clear
+of one of the most heinous sins of civilisation. As an
+instance of what can be done by private effort, there
+is a farm not sixty miles from a capital city where at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+this moment there are impala, rooi hartebeest, koodoo,
+and wild ostrich.</p>
+
+<p>There are few countries in the world where sport
+can be enjoyed in more delectable surroundings. The
+cold fresh mornings, when the mist is creeping from
+the grey hills and the vigour of dawn is in the blood;
+the warm sun-steeped spaces at noonday; the purple
+dusk, when the veld becomes a kind of Land East of
+the Sun and West of the Moon, full of fairy lights and
+mysterious shadows; the bitter night, when the
+southern constellations blaze in the profound sky,&mdash;he
+who has once seen them must carry the memory
+for ever. It is such things, and not hunger and thirst
+and weariness, which remain in a man&rsquo;s mind. For
+the lover of nature and wild things (which is to say
+the true sportsman) it is little wonder if, after these,
+home and ambition and a comfortable life seem degrees
+of the infinitely small. And the others, who are only
+brief visitors, will carry away unforgettable pictures
+to tantalise them at work and put them out of all
+patience with an indoor world&mdash;the bivouac under
+the stars on the high veld, or some secret glen of the
+Wood Bush, or the long lines of hill which huddle
+behind Lydenburg into the sunset.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a>
+In other parts of British Africa the policy of reserves has received
+full recognition. In East Africa there are two large reserves, one along
+the Uganda Railway and the other near Lake Rudolf. In the Soudan
+there is a vast reserve between the Blue and the White Niles, and most
+of the best shooting-ground throughout the country is strictly protected.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a>
+The eland is the one conspicuous exception.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a>
+A Transvaal friend informs me that my classification, though the one
+commonly in use, is quite inaccurate. The yellow-fish and the white-fish
+are not carp but species of barbel, and what I have called barbel is another
+variant of the same family, called by the Dutch &ldquo;kalverskop,&rdquo; or
+&ldquo;calf&rsquo;s-head,&rdquo; from its shape. There is no true carp, though the Dutch
+give the name of &ldquo;kurper&rdquo; to a very curious little fish about four inches
+long which is common in streams flowing into the Vaal. The other chief
+varieties are the coarse mud-fish and the cat-fish, which latter is often
+mixed up with the barbel. It is to be hoped that some local ichthyologist
+will give his attention to the native fishes&mdash;a very interesting subject,
+and one at present in the most unscientific confusion.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>PART III.<br />
+<br />
+THE POLITICAL PROBLEM</h2>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188"><!-- blank page --></a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XII.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE ECONOMIC FACTOR.</h4>
+
+
+<p>After a three years&rsquo; war, and at the cost of over 200
+millions, Britain has secured for her own children the
+indisputable possession of the new colonies. In earlier
+chapters an attempt has been made to sketch roughly
+the historical influences which may help to shape the
+future and to describe the actual features of the land
+which charm and perplex the beholder. We have
+now to face the direct problems into which the situation
+can be resolved, and in particular that question of
+material wellbeing which is the most insistent, because
+the most easily realised, for both statesman and people.
+The economic factor in the politics of a country is
+always a difficult matter to discuss, for it is made up
+of infinite details, some of them purely speculative, all
+of them hard to disentangle. If a business man were
+to do what he never does, and sit down to analyse
+calmly his position, he would have to go far beyond
+balance-sheets and statements of profit and loss. He
+would be compelled to look into the social and
+economic conditions under which he lived; he would
+have to estimate rival activities and forecast their
+development; the money market, rates of exchange,
+the nature of the labour supply, the effect of political
+and social movements, even such matters as his own
+bodily and mental health, and his standing among
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+his fellows, would properly make part of the inquiry.
+With the private individual the analysis would be
+ridiculous, because the component parts are too minute
+to realise; but with a nation, where the lines are
+broader, some stock-taking of this kind is periodically
+desirable. But in spite of, or because of, the complexity
+of the inquiry, the human mind is apt to
+complicate it needlessly by running after side-issues
+and losing sight of the main features of the problem.
+The economic position of a country embraces in a sense
+almost every detail of human life; but there is no
+reason why the mass of detail should be allowed to
+get out of focus and obscure the synthesis of the
+survey. Provided we remember that the economic
+factor is not correctly estimated by looking only at
+revenue and expenditure, imports and exports, and
+fiscal provisions, we may safely devote our energies to
+steering clear of the labyrinth of secondary detail
+in which the ordinary statistician would seek to
+involve us.</p>
+
+<p>In the following pages it is proposed to confine the
+survey to what appear to be the main features of a
+complex question. It would be vain to embark on
+speculations as to the payable ore in the ground,
+market forecasts, suggestions for new industries, and
+the many hints towards a reformed fiscal system with
+which local and European papers have been crowded.
+It is sufficient to note the existence of such questions;
+the materials for a true understanding of the South
+African economy are not to be found in them. In
+particular it is proposed to avoid needless statistics,
+which, apart from the fact that they are often inaccurate
+and partisan, are the buttress of that
+particularist logic which is the foe of true reason.
+Two questions may be taken as the general heads of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+our inquiry: first, Wherein consists the wealth of the
+land, actual and potential? and, secondly, How best
+may that wealth be maintained and developed for the
+national good?</p>
+
+
+<h5>I.</h5>
+
+<p>The cardinal economic fact is the existence of gold&mdash;gold
+as it is found in no other country, not in casual
+pockets and reefs, but in quantities which can for the
+most part be accurately mapped out and valued
+months and years before it is worked; gold which is
+mined not as an adventure, but as an organised and
+stable industry. The Main Reef formation extends
+for sixty-two miles, from Randfontein to Holfontein,<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>
+but three-fourths of the gold mined has been produced
+in the central section, which is only some twelve miles
+long. In 1886 the district was proclaimed a public
+gold-field, and since that day ore worth nearly 100
+millions sterling has been extracted. The development
+took place in spite of difficulties which vastly increased
+the working costs. The dynamite and railway monopolies,
+the heavy expense of the transit of machinery
+from the coast, the absence of subsidiary local industries
+to feed the gold industry, forced the work into
+the hands of a small circle of rich firms who could
+provide the large capital and face the heavy risks of a
+new enterprise. It is clear, therefore, that mining on
+the Rand, while a notable enterprise, has necessarily
+been a slow one, since the two natural factors, the
+amount of gold in the soil and the labour of working
+it, have been complicated by many artificial hindrances.
+The past is not the true basis for estimating
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+the future of the industry; the proper premises for a
+forecast are the two natural factors&mdash;the quantity of
+gold in the earth and the normal cost of winning it.
+It is the first that concerns us at present.</p>
+
+<p>All estimates must be merely conjectural, and can
+be used only with the greatest caution. But in the
+multitude of conjectures there may be such a consensus
+of opinion as to ensure us a fair certainty that
+this or that is the view of those who are best fitted to
+judge. Mr Bleloch, in a calculation based on the
+report of the most eminent engineers, values the
+amount of gold still in the Rand at 2871 millions
+sterling, showing a profit to the companies concerned
+of over 975 millions. If we put the life of the Rand
+at one hundred years, which is a mean between conflicting
+estimates, we shall have an average, allowing
+for reserve funds, of 8 millions to be paid yearly in
+dividends to shareholders. In 1898 twenty-six companies
+paid dividends amounting to over 4 millions:
+therefore, on Mr Bleloch&rsquo;s figures, we can promise at
+least one hundred years to the Rand of twice the prosperity
+of 1898. These figures include the deep levels,
+but do not take into account any of the Rand extensions,
+in which the Main Reef has been traced for
+over 300 miles. It is certain that in the direction
+of Heidelberg and Greylingstad gold in payable
+quantities exists for not less than seventy miles, and
+it is at least probable that a similar extension exists
+in the Potchefstroom and Klerksdorp districts in the
+west. So much for the peculiar &ldquo;banket&rdquo; formation
+of the Rand, which must remain the type of stable
+gold-mining,&mdash;stable, because the element of uncertainty
+over any group of properties is reduced to a
+minimum, and the high organisation necessary and
+the large initial outlay produce a community less
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+of rivals than of fellow-workers. Quartz reefs and
+alluvial deposits are found in many parts of the
+country. In Lydenburg and Barberton, where the
+earliest gold mines were sunk, several producing
+companies are at work; and this type of mining
+will develop equally with the Rand under a system
+which abolishes monopolies and assists instead of
+discouraging enterprise. In the northern districts,
+around the Wood Bush and the Zoutpansberg ranges,
+there are quartz and alluvial mining, and indications
+of &ldquo;banket&rdquo; formation, and in the all but
+unknown region adjoining Portuguese territory, if
+tales be true, there may be gold in quantities still
+undreamed of.</p>
+
+<p>No figures are reliable, all estimates are disputed,
+but from the very contradictions one fact emerges&mdash;that
+there is gold enough to give employment to a
+greatly increased mining population for at least fifty
+years, and to decentralise the industry and create
+large industrial belts instead of one industrial city.
+Nor is gold the only mineral. From Pretoria to Piet
+Retief run coal-beds, many of them of great richness
+and good quality, covering an area of more than
+10,000 square miles. It has been calculated that
+60,000 million tons are available. The quality of the
+coal in the undeveloped beds lying to the south of
+Middelburg is, in the opinion of experts, equal to the
+best British product. Iron-ore is abundant in many
+parts, particularly in the coal-bearing regions of the
+east. Lead has been worked near Zeerust, and there
+are good grounds for believing that copper in large
+quantities exists in Waterberg and in the tract
+between Pietersburg and the Limpopo. Diamond
+pipes are found in several places in the region due
+east of Pretoria, where the new Premier Mine seems
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+to promise a richness not equalled by Kimberley; and
+it is probable that places like the Springbok Flats and
+the western parts of Christiana are highly diamondiferous.
+Sapphires have been found in the west, and
+diamonds and spinels are reported from the northern
+mountains. Few countries have a soil more amply
+mineralised; but the sparse population, mainly
+absorbed in the quest of one mineral, has done little
+to exploit its wealth. Mining, save for gold and coal,
+is still in the Transvaal a thing of the future. The
+agricultural and pastoral wealth is dealt with in
+another chapter. But we may note an asset, which
+is wholly undeveloped, in the cultivation and protection
+of the natural wood of the north and east, and
+the planting of imported trees. Timber in an inland
+mining country is a valuable product, and on the soil
+of the high veld new plantations spring up like
+mushrooms. Ten feet a-year is the common rate of
+growth for gums, and in the warmer tracts it is nearer
+twenty. Many indigenous South African trees, which
+a few years ago, under an unwise system of timber
+concessions, were disappearing from most places save
+a few sequestered glens in the north, might under
+proper care become a lucrative branch of forestry.
+Current estimates, rough and inaccurate as they
+must be, are the fruit of a very general conviction,
+which on the broadest basis is amply supported by
+facts. There is sufficient natural wealth&mdash;mineral,
+pastoral, and agricultural&mdash;to provide a sound industrial
+foundation for the new States. It is only on
+the details of its exploitation that experts differ.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">In any calculation of natural wealth there is another
+factor to be noted which controls production and dictates
+its method. Whatever the natural riches of a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+country may be, climate and situation must be weighed
+in their practical estimate. A diamond pipe at the
+South Pole and acres of rich soil in Tibet are practically
+as valueless as a fine anchorage on the Sahara
+coast or a bracing climate in Tierra del Fuego. In
+the new colonies we have throughout three-fourths of
+their area a climate where white men can labour out of
+doors all the year round. The remaining fourth is less
+pestilential than many places in Ceylon, Burma, and
+the Malay Peninsula, where Europeans live and work.
+There are certain very real climatic disadvantages&mdash;frequent
+thunderstorms, hailstorms in summer when
+fruits and crops are ripening, rains concentrated over
+a few months, a long, dusty, waterless winter. But
+these are difficulties which can be surmounted for the
+most part by human ingenuity, and at the worst they
+place no absolute bar on enterprise. From the standpoint
+of health the climate is nearly perfect, inducing
+a vigour and alertness of body and mind which in the
+more feverish life of cities may ruin the nerves and
+prematurely age a man, but in all wholesome forms of
+labour enable work to be done at a maximum pressure
+and with the minimum discomfort. In valuing, therefore,
+the natural assets of the new colonies, we need
+write off nothing for climatic hindrances. The situation
+is a more doubtful matter. They pay for their
+freedom from the low heats of the coast by the absence
+of private outlets for trade and the consequent
+difficulties which all people must meet who have to
+hire others to do their shipping and carrying. It is
+not the difficulty of Missouri or Ohio or other inland
+states in one territory, but of separate peoples, with
+interests often conflicting, who have to submit to
+weary customs and railway arrangements before their
+outlet can exist. This is one, perhaps the only,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+genuine natural limitation which all schemes of economic
+development must take account of.</p>
+
+<p>The country is not new, and therefore in sketching
+its natural wealth we do not exhaust the preliminaries
+of the question. There are ready-made industrial conditions
+to be considered which may modify our estimate
+of the initial equipment. Such are the commercial
+structures already built up in the great commercial
+centre, which for this purpose represents the new
+colonies; the nature and future of the labour supply;
+the existing markets; the already prepared means of
+transit. The gold industry, as was to be expected from
+its nature, has fallen into the hands of a few houses.
+Eight great financial groups control the wealth of the
+Rand: the Eckstein group alone has interests which
+might be capitalised at 70 millions; the Consolidated
+Gold-fields at about 30 millions. The reason for this
+state of affairs is obvious. Gold-mining in the Rand
+fashion is a costly business, and altogether beyond the
+reach of the small man: claims were bought up by the
+financiers who were first in possession, and, since they
+were able to hold and develop, the entry of other
+financial houses has been blocked. But the great
+mining firms do not confine their activity to gold.
+They own millions of acres of land throughout the
+country, and many valuable building sites in the
+towns. Originally, doubtless, land was bought purely
+as a mining speculation, but they are not slow, in the
+absence of minerals, to make out of it what they can.
+These Rand houses are the bugbear of a certain class
+of politician. The Rand is closed to the small man, so
+runs the cry; a system of trusts is being created; in
+a little while the country will be under the iron heel
+of a financial ring. It is assumed that the mining
+firms will turn their attention to ordinary commerce,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+and oust the independent trader and cultivator and
+the small manufacturer. Certain trading experiments
+by some of the chief houses, and an attempt to grow
+food-supplies for their own employees, give a certain
+support to the forecast.</p>
+
+<p>If the Trust system in its American form were ever
+to become a reality in South Africa, the obvious and
+infallible checks against too wide an expansion would
+arise there as elsewhere. A trust can only exist in full
+strength under its originators. There can be no apostolic
+succession in trust management; the second or
+the third generation must be on a lower scale, and the
+great fabric will crumble. A huge combination can
+only be maintained by perpetual energy and ceaseless
+labour, and, like the empire of Charlemagne, it will
+dwindle under a successor. A trust can be created
+but not perpetuated. No group of directors, no paid
+manager, can maintain the nicety of judgment and the
+sleepless care which alone can preserve from decay an
+artificial structure imposed upon an unwilling society.
+But in the case of the new colonies there are special
+reasons which make this development highly improbable.
+A trust flourishes only on highly protected
+soil, and Free Trade must long be predominant in the
+Transvaal. Again, while there can never be a trust in
+gold, the market being unlimited and beyond any
+possibility of control, gold-mining must remain the
+chief interest for any group of firms who desired to
+establish a trust in other commodities. Now gold-mining
+is one-third an industry and two-thirds a
+scientific inquiry. An ordinary trust is concerned
+less with production than with the control of the
+markets and the methods of distribution. But all
+progress in Rand mining depends on nice and speculative
+scientific calculation. To reduce the working
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+costs by improved appliances, so that ore of a low
+grade may become payable, is so vital a matter with
+every great firm which is concerned in gold-mining,
+that the commercial or trust side, which must be
+concerned not with gold but with other forms of production,
+is not likely to be given undue prominence.
+Human capacity is limited, and no man or body of
+men can meet these two very different classes of problems
+at the same time. The experiments of mining
+firms in other trades have been due far more to the
+immense cost of imports and the absence of subsidiary
+industries than to a Napoleonic desire for consolidation.
+There is room, abundant room, in the Transvaal
+for ironworks and factories, for the private trader and
+the independent farmer; and the bogey of the great
+houses resolves itself in practice into little more than a
+stimulating example in progressive business methods.</p>
+
+<p>The foregoing remarks do not, however, touch the
+question whether or not the gold industry is to remain
+a preserve of a few groups. If it is, there can be little
+real objection. The market for gold can never be controlled
+like the diamond-market, and there is small
+fear of a gold-mining De Beers dictating to the world.
+Moreover, the great groups are not static but mobile,
+constantly dividing and subdividing, throwing off subsidiary
+companies and adding new ones, no more
+monopolists than the cotton-spinners of Manchester
+or the shipbuilders of Glasgow. The fact remains
+that they own most of the mining rights in the country,
+and all development must lie very much in their hands.
+The owner of the minerals on a farm in Potchefstroom
+is at liberty to form a company and work them himself.
+But the case will be uncommon, since the bulk
+of the mineral rights are already absorbed, and, on
+the Rand system of mining, an unknown adventurer
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+would have difficulty in raising the large initial
+capital. It is only in this sense that there is any
+meaning in the charge of monopoly. A more real
+grievance is that a great house will often buy up claims
+throughout the country and leave them unworked till
+it suits its pleasure, thereby hindering industrial development.
+This, in a sense, is true, but the reason is
+to be found mainly in the difficulty of development
+under recent conditions,&mdash;conditions which, for the
+matter of that, would have pressed far more hardly on
+the small man than on the rich firms. So far as the
+gold industry is concerned, the plaint of the humble
+citizen on this score is a little ridiculous. He asks
+an impossibility, and in his heart admits the folly of
+the request.</p>
+
+<p>It is time that the anti-capitalist parrot-cry were
+recognised in its true meaning. On the Rand it is
+not the wail of a downtrodden proletariat or of the
+industrious small merchant whose occupation is gone.
+It is the dishonest agitation of a speculating class
+who find their activity limited by the strenuous and
+rational policy of the great houses. I would suggest
+as a fair parallel the outcry of small and disreputable
+publicans in a rising town where it has been found
+profitable to open good restaurants and decent hotels.
+Without capital the Transvaal is a piece of bare
+veld; with capital wrongly applied it is a hunting-ground
+for the adventurer and the bogus-promoter.
+The gold industry depends on capital, because only
+capital combined with intelligence and patience could
+have raised it from a speculation to an industry. But
+facts are the most eloquent form of apologetics. At
+the moment over 30 millions have been spent on
+development by producing companies, leaving out of
+account the large administrative and office expenses.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+How much has been spent in the same way on mines
+which have not reached the producing stage it is
+impossible to say, but the figure must be very large.
+To start an ordinary deep-level mine costs nearly a
+million before any profits are made. Surely it is right
+to see in an organisation which is prepared to face
+such an outlay some qualities of courage and patience.
+It is possible that the great houses may find themselves
+in conflict with the best public opinion on certain
+matters before the day is done; but it is well to recognise
+that the very existence of an industrial population
+is due to capital wisely and patiently used by the
+strong men who were the makers of the country.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">Last in our calculation of assets comes the existing
+or accessible machinery of exploitation and production&mdash;the
+labour supply, the means of transit, the available
+markets. The first is a complicated matter on which
+it is hard to dogmatise. For some months it has been
+the most strenuously canvassed of South African
+problems. On its solution depends without doubt
+not only the future prosperity but the immediate
+insolvency of the country. And at the same time,
+being bound up more than other economic questions
+with far-reaching political interests, its solution has
+become less a commercial adjustment than a piece of
+national policy. As was to be expected in this kind
+of discussion, the true issues have been habitually
+obscured. The antithesis is not between labour and
+no labour, but in one aspect between the cheap,
+unskilled native and the dear, more highly skilled
+white; and in another between a limited supply,
+which means the curtailment of enterprise, and an
+unlimited supply, even of a lower quality, which
+would allow full development. Again, the antithesis
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+is not absolute, as has been often assumed: the true
+solution may lie in a compromise, a delicate cutting
+of the coat to suit the particular cloths employed in
+its making.</p>
+
+<p>It is almost entirely a mining question. In most
+other industries the work can be done by white men
+with the assistance of a few natives. In agriculture,
+as things stand at present, sufficient native labour
+can be procured, and under an improved system of
+taxation the supply might be largely increased,
+within limits. The demand in agriculture should
+diminish rather than increase, save in the tropical
+and sub-tropical regions, where native labour is
+always plentiful. On the high veld a single farmer,
+if he ploughs with oxen, wants a boy as a voorlooper
+and another to use the whip; but this and similar
+work may well be performed in time by his own sons
+or by white servants. Railway construction will draw
+heavily on the supply, but its requirements are, after
+all, limited and small in comparison with the immense
+needs of the mines. For in the latter a very large
+number of employees is necessary, the bulk of the
+work is unskilled, and the conditions under which
+it must be performed are frequently such as to deter
+the ordinary European. The case is not quite that
+of labour in the West Indian plantations with which
+it has been compared, but there are many points of
+resemblance. The labour, on the current view, must
+be cheap; it must exist in large quantities; and the
+work is bound in certain respects to be hard and
+unpleasant&mdash;not perhaps harder than coal-mining
+in England, but, taking into account the superior
+average of comfort in the new colonies, indubitably
+more unattractive to the local workman.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Before the war some 90,000 natives were employed
+in the Witwatersrand mines. The average cost was
+from 1s. 6d. to 2s. a-day, food and lodging being
+provided; but the expense of acquiring the labour
+considerably raised the actual price per man. The
+old method was by a system of touts, who were
+paid as much as £5 a-head for their importation.
+The system led to great abuses, chicanery, needless
+competition false promises, which often cut off the
+supply in a whole territory. To meet the difficulty
+the Witwatersrand Native Labour Association was
+formed, whose duties were to recruit native labour
+and distribute it equitably to the mines within the
+association. Its agents were paid by salaries instead
+of by results, and the various native locations in the
+Transvaal, Swaziland, and Portuguese territory were
+exploited by them. But with all its efforts the mines
+were inadequately supplied. The 90,000 natives
+barely sufficed to maintain the <i>status quo</i>, and there
+was no margin for new development. The war
+scattered the accumulated supply. The local natives
+grew rich in military service, and declined to leave
+their kraals. Those imported from a distance returned
+to their homes, and the whole work of collection had
+to begin again. In October 1902, which may be taken
+as a fair date to estimate the condition of things after
+the war, only 31,000 natives were at work, one-third
+of the former staff. By May 1903, after herculean
+efforts, the supply had increased to a little over
+41,000.</p>
+
+<p>The problem is, therefore, a very serious one. To
+return to the old state of things the present supply
+must be doubled; to provide for any adequate progress
+it must at the lowest estimate be multiplied by
+ten. Any wholesale increase to the mining wealth of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+the country must come from the exploital of the deep
+level and the low-grade properties. The working costs
+per ton of ore run from 17s. 6d. to 30s.; on the Rand
+the average is about 27s.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> But the ordinary low-grade
+mines produce ore worth little more than 18s.
+to 20s. a-ton. To make their development possible the
+working cost must be reduced to 15s.-17s. Improved
+machinery may do something, but the first necessity
+is cheap labour. But where are the natives to come
+from? The efforts of the Native Labour Associations
+have not succeeded in showing that the need can be
+met from any of the old supply grounds. New taxation
+and the spending of their war savings may drive
+some of the Transvaal natives to the mines; but as
+the total native population of the colony is only about
+three quarters of a million, the whole working male
+force, which may be taken at one in ten, would not
+meet the demand. In addition to this we have the
+fact that no taxation would reach more than one-half
+of the population, and that of this half three-quarters
+is probably unfit for mining work. The total native
+population south of the Zambesi is at the present
+moment a little over 6 millions. Supposing this
+field were worked to the uttermost, we should still
+scarcely meet the demands likely to arise within the
+next five years for the gold industry alone; and such
+exhaustive exploitation is beyond the wildest dream
+of any Chamber of Mines.</p>
+
+<p>The case may be stated thus. With all assistance
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+from local taxation and from the amended organisation
+of the Native Labour Association, Africa, south
+of the Zambesi, will be unable to afford the unlimited
+supply of native labour which is the <i>sine quâ non</i> of
+mining progress. It would therefore appear that a
+new ground of supply must be sought. By those who
+admit this (and as will appear later, there are some
+who do not) three solutions have been advocated,
+none of which is unattended with difficulties. The
+first is to find a recruiting-ground in the vast district
+between the Zambesi and the White Nile, a region
+more densely populated by the aborigines than any
+other part of Africa. This scheme has been urged
+by Sir Harry Johnston with all the weight of his
+unrivalled experience. The advantages of the solution
+are numerous. Those natives live directly
+or indirectly under British sway. They are unsophisticated,
+and the old rate of wages would mean
+undreamed-of wealth to them. Moreover, the experiment
+would be of a certain assistance to Central
+Africa, for on their return home with their wages
+money would be put into circulation, the standard
+of living would rise, taxes would be easier to collect,
+and Government and governed would mutually profit.
+On the other hand, there are very many reasons
+against the proposal. Uganda and Nyassaland, to
+take the two chief instances, are in need of labour
+for their own development, and will strenuously resist
+its exportation. Their nascent civilisation will
+be dislocated if they are made the hunting-ground
+of labour agents. Nor is it clear that the Central
+African native is suited for mining purposes, since
+both in constitution and the food he lives on he
+differs from his southern kinsman, and, in the opinion
+of many good authorities, his transplantation to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+high veld would mean a swollen death-rate. Overtures
+have also been made to Northern and Southern
+Nigeria, but the answer from those territories is
+still more hopeless. It is too early to pronounce on
+the future of the Central African scheme. A fair
+<i>prima facie</i> case can be made out for its success,
+and the result of the first experiments has not been
+wholly discouraging. But in any case it is certain
+that from this source no unlimited or permanent
+supply can come. A modicum, perhaps gradually
+increasing, may be secured, and in this day of small
+things we can be thankful for any increase in native
+African labour. But great care is necessary in its
+working. There must be no hint of coercion; the
+native must be vigilantly looked after from the day
+he leaves his kraal to the day he returns at the
+end of his twelvemonth&rsquo;s service,&mdash;for the districts
+must be nursed, and it is on the report of the first
+batches that the success of the enterprise depends.
+The transport will cost money, but it is doubtful
+if it will work out at more per head than the old
+premium for importation.</p>
+
+<p>The second solution has roused a storm of opposition,
+and its adoption would mean the overthrow of
+the old economics of the mining industry. It is proposed
+to use Kaffirs only in the deepest levels and in
+work unsuited for white men (for which the present
+supply will suffice), and in all other tasks to employ
+white labour. The white workman on the Rand
+under present conditions will be more than four times
+as dear as the native, costing 8s. 6d. as against the
+Kaffir&rsquo;s 2s. a-day. Many arguments to justify the expense
+have been brought forward, of which the weakest
+is that the white man can do four times the Kaffir&rsquo;s
+work. In many branches of unskilled labour he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+can barely compete with him. The real argument
+is concerned with the more general aspects of the
+problem. In a highly organised industry there is
+bound to be a higher maximum efficiency and regularity
+from a staff of white employees, who are working
+intelligently to better themselves and have certain
+political and social interests at stake in their labour.
+On political grounds, again, it is most desirable, for
+apart from relieving the strain on congested home
+districts, it would provide a feeding-ground for South
+African development, a material wherewith to colonise
+the wilds of the north. The sons of the white
+men would go out to farm and mine for themselves;
+and in two generations, when the Rand has become a
+normal industrial centre, we should have that interchange
+of population between town and country which
+is one of the buttresses of civilisation.</p>
+
+<p>The white labour movement has roused bitter opposition,
+partly from the mining houses, and to some
+extent from white workmen on the Rand, who wish to
+make a monopoly of their position. Many of the arguments
+against the scheme need not detain us. There is
+no objection to white and black labour working side by
+side, any more than there is an objection on a tropical
+fruit-farm to a white man digging an orchard and a
+Kaffir carting manure for it, or on board ship to a
+white mate and a black cook being part of the same
+crew. The white man will have the presence of his
+fellows, the chance of advancement, and a higher wage
+to support his self-respect, which must be a brittle
+article indeed if it requires further strengthening.
+Nor is there much justification for the fears of those
+who see in white labour the beginning of endless
+labour troubles, culminating in the tyranny of the
+working man. The situation would be the same as in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+any other industrial city&mdash;as in Manchester, Sheffield,
+or Glasgow, where the bulk of the population are
+industrial employees. Strikes and lock-outs will come,
+but it is better to have in an English city a free and
+vigorous English population, than to bolster up the
+chief industry by an exotic labour system. Besides,
+there is always the Kaffir as a counterfoil, a very
+strong argument to inspire moderation in the labourer&rsquo;s
+demands. White labour remains the ideal, the proper
+aim of all right-thinking men; but for the present it
+is more or less an impossibility. It simply does not
+meet the economic difficulty. Unless the Mines are
+content to make the <i>gran rifiuto</i>, curtail production,
+and play a waiting game,&mdash;a decision, as we
+shall see, quite as ruinous to the country as to the
+shareholder,&mdash;cheap labour under present conditions is
+a sheer necessity. One argument on economic grounds
+has been brought forward for white labour, which runs
+somewhat as follows: Expansion and development
+depend upon an unlimited labour-supply; white labour
+gives such an unlimited supply,&mdash;therefore it would
+pay to give four times the present wage and secure
+expansion rather than keep to the old scale and stagnate.
+Supposing a mining group to have a capital of
+ten millions, of which four are sunk in working mines,
+three held in reserve, and three invested in good but
+undeveloped claims. The present state of things
+allows of a dividend of 40 per cent on the first four
+millions; white labour would reduce the dividend to
+20 per cent. But if white labour allowed the exploital
+of the unworked claims, so that a dividend of 20 to 25
+per cent could be paid on the other six millions, it
+would be good business for the firm. It would, but
+it is not the problem before us. The argument
+assumes that the new properties are of the same class
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+as those at present paying dividends, whereas they
+are in the main of so low a grade or demand such
+an immense initial outlay that, so far from showing
+a profit with dear labour, they would be the ruin
+of their promoters.</p>
+
+<p>The third proposal is to introduce Chinese<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> labour
+under short-time contracts and a rigorous supervision.
+Its supporters argue with much reason that the Chinaman
+has been found useful as a deep-level miner; that
+he is thrifty, intelligent, law-abiding, and tolerably
+clean; that, supposing 200,000 Chinamen were employed
+in the mines, it would still mean not less than
+40,000 white workers, so that white labour would
+increase in a liberal ratio; that a proper compound
+system and a strict limit to the term of engagement
+would secure the country against the economic dangers
+which threaten Australia and the United States. It
+is not yet certain that this ample supply of Chinese
+labour can be obtained, the matter being in process of
+investigation; but there is this to be said for the
+proposal, that it is the only one which touches directly
+the needs of the situation. The others are counsels
+of perfection, ends of policy on which all are agreed;
+this alone offers an immediate satisfaction to a very
+pressing want. The only argument which can be
+brought against it is not economic<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> but political,&mdash;that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+its use would endanger the success of those very aims
+on which all are agreed. The Chinese are the born
+interlopers of the world. Whatever care we take
+there will be a leakage: a Chinese population, more
+feared, apparently, for its virtues than its vices, will
+grow up in the cities, the small trades will be shut to
+Europeans, the whole standard of life for the masses
+will be lowered, and the moral and social currency of
+the nation debased. The real case, therefore, of the
+opponent of Chinese labour, is that it is not possible
+to carry out the proposed plan; that we cannot import
+men on a fixed contract and deport them at the end of
+it; that we cannot build our compound walls so high
+as to prevent a leakage into the outer world; that, in
+short, the law is too weak to do its duty. There is no
+difference between any of the disputants on the danger
+of letting the labour loose in the country; but the one
+side maintains that with proper precaution this peril
+can be averted, the other that it is like the sea when
+it has found an entrance into a sea-wall, a little trickle
+which inevitably becomes a deluge. It is not a very
+convincing contention, though we can respect the
+honest political instincts which support it; indeed,
+there is a touch of that familiar fallacy, the &ldquo;thin-end-of-the-wedge&rdquo;
+argument, which opposes an undoubtedly
+beneficent reform because of its possible
+maleficent extension. The conflict is between an
+instant economic need and a potential political danger,
+and, with all desire to move cautiously, the wisest
+course would seem to be to meet the one, and trust
+to the good sense and courage of the people to avert
+the other. The problem of alien labour is indeed
+becoming a familiar one to many Crown Colonies.
+The Colonial Office has been asked to sanction the importation
+of Chinamen to Ashanti, and the Rhodesian
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+Immigration Ordinance of 1901 made the enterprise
+legal for Southern Rhodesia.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> In the Transvaal there
+is a unique field for an experiment on sane and politic
+lines, and for the creation of a sound administrative
+precedent for other colonies to follow. There is a
+result, too, which may reasonably be hoped for from
+the provision of cheap labour which would be of direct
+political value. It would enable some of the smaller
+properties throughout the country to be worked at a
+profit, and so might in time redeem the gold industry
+from the capitalist monopoly, which it must remain
+under present conditions, and create a class of small
+mine-owners, on the analogy of the small coal-owners
+in England.</p>
+
+<p>There is one final argument against imported labour
+which demands a short notice, for it has been used
+by many serious men who are not given to captious
+objections. If we take the original capital of most
+mines we shall find that it has been extensively
+watered, and that even on the nominal capital there
+is a huge appreciation. A mine, to take an extreme
+instance, begins with a capital of £50,000 in £1
+shares; subsequently the shareholders receive eleven
+£5 shares for every £1 share, making the present
+nominal capital £2,750,000. The quotation of those
+£5 shares is, say, £10&#8542;, making the total capital
+value £5,981,250. A gold output which, under
+present conditions, is not sufficient to pay a fair
+dividend upon this capitalisation, would be amply
+sufficient to pay a dividend on the nominal capital,
+and more than sufficient to pay 500 per cent on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+the original capital. The question, therefore, of
+dividend-paying is out of all relation to the actual
+margin of profit on the working of a mine. The
+deduction is that the companies have themselves to
+blame, and must face a depreciation in their shares;
+and the unfortunate investor who has bought £5
+shares at £10, believing a return of 4 per cent on
+his capital certain, must console himself with the
+reflection that every man must pay for his folly.
+This argument is final against any <i>ad misericordiam</i>
+plea of the companies, but it does not touch the
+heart of the question. The working of the large
+over-capitalised properties is one thing, and the
+development of low-grade properties, on which large
+sums have been spent and for which no profits have
+yet been earned, is quite another. The old well-established
+mines can afford to fight their own
+battles, and for the matter of that, in spite of their
+heavy expenditure out of capital during the war,
+are mostly paying dividends even under present
+conditions: the new properties, on which the future
+of the country depends, are not, as a rule, over-capitalised,
+and, as we have seen, the margin of
+profit is so small on each ton of ore, that the
+question is reduced to its bare essentials&mdash;Is it
+possible to mine ore worth twenty shillings at a
+cost under a pound? But even as concerns the
+richer companies the argument is scarcely valid, for
+it leaves out of account that not inconsiderable factor,
+the credit of the country. It is so essential that
+new capital should be attracted for the twenty
+different needs of development, to which any Government
+loan can only be a trifling contribution, that
+anything which tends to shake the confidence of
+the world in the commercial structure of South
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+Africa is the gravest danger. Is it certain, too,
+that that much-abused epithet of &ldquo;<i>bonâ fide</i> investor&rdquo;
+is not applicable to the men who bought high-priced
+securities, not as a speculation, but as a modest
+investment?</p>
+
+<p>It is often said by opponents of imported labour
+that its introduction will scarcely have taken place
+before an agitation will be begun for its withdrawal.
+So far from being an argument against the experiment,
+this is precisely the strongest which could be
+urged in its favour. If the desire of the country
+is for white labour, then the Chinaman can be tried
+with little danger. The mine-owners will find in
+time that work on a time contract by alien labourers
+is far from satisfactory, and when other circumstances
+permit they will no doubt readily adopt that system
+of free competitive labour which only a white industrial
+class can create. Had there been any chance
+of the experiment being tried with complete popular
+approval, then the danger would have been considerable,
+for the Chinaman might easily have spread
+from mining to all industries and trades; but since
+it will be made in spite of an influential opposition,
+and will be jealously watched by unfriendly eyes, it
+seems inevitable that when it has played its part
+it will be willingly dispensed with. By refusing to
+accept the experiment we are doing our best to
+frustrate all hopes of a white population by cramping
+the development of the country at its most
+critical time and making a livelihood impossible for
+many of the existing white working men. When
+mines are shut down because of a lack of underground
+labourers, what becomes of the Englishmen
+who work above ground? It is a significant fact
+that many white miners, who were formerly the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+most bitter opponents of imported labour, are now
+its strenuous advocates, since they and their class
+are beginning to feel the pinch.</p>
+
+<p>But if the importation of Asiatics is undertaken,
+it should be on a very clear understanding and with
+a very distinct object in view. The thing is far too
+dangerous at the best to be made the domain of
+unconsidered experiments. The ideal of white labour
+in the long-run must be preserved; and we must
+take jealous care that by the creation of a foreign
+labouring class the way is not barred to that industrialisation
+of the native races on which the
+future of South Africa so largely depends. A
+maximum might be fixed by law&mdash;say 300,000
+unskilled labourers, which could be increased if
+necessary by later enactments; and in so far as the
+maximum could not be attained by white and black
+labour, Chinese might be imported as a complement.
+The complement would, let us hope, rapidly decrease
+as new machinery lessened the amount of labour
+required, and the native districts of Africa were
+more fully exploited. All imported labour would be
+subject to rigorous conditions as to compounds, length
+of contract, and ultimate repatriation&mdash;conditions
+which any ordinary police could enforce without
+difficulty. At the same time, the Native Labour
+Association should be made a Government department.
+As a private organisation it is not more
+efficient, and it is certainly less respected, than a
+Government department would be. What is wanted
+in all proper recruiting is the prestige of the Crown.
+Natives, who have been often deceived by touts, and
+regard the offers of the Labour Association agents
+as so many idle words, would be ready enough to
+listen to proposals made under the guarantee of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+paramount chief. It is a risky game for a Government
+to embark in private business; but the Native
+Labour Association is not a business, but a department,
+conducted on the lines of a Government
+department, but without its prestige. Under the
+Crown its organisation would remain intact, but its
+status would be raised and its efficiency centupled.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">The railway system, immature as it is, has worked
+wonders for the country. With few lines, and those
+single and narrow gauge, with exorbitant rates of
+transit and a frequently ineffective organisation, it
+has still above all other factors made development
+possible. In former days, when heavy mining
+machinery had to be brought by waggons from
+Kimberley or Natal or Delagoa Bay, a mine required
+to be rich indeed before it could be worked at a profit,
+enterprise was costly and perilous, and the result was
+the stagnation of all activities save that one where
+enterprise was a primal necessity. Under the late
+Governments one line ran through the two States,
+from Norval&rsquo;s Pont to Pietersburg, with small branch
+lines in the Orange Free State to Winburg and Heilbron,
+and in the Transvaal to Springs and Klerksdorp.
+The Natal line was continued from Charlestown to
+join the trunk line at Elandsfontein, and the Delagoa
+Bay line from Komati Poort to Pretoria, with a little
+branch to Barberton and the beginnings of a branch to
+the Selati gold-fields. The Transvaal had thus three
+direct outlets to the coast; the Orange Free State
+two, for a branch ran from the Natal line at Ladysmith
+to the little eastern town of Harrismith. Two
+broad necessities of railway policy therefore awaited
+the new Government. The existing system must be
+perfected and interconnected, new routes to the coast
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+created to relieve the present strain, the railways of
+adjoining colonies brought into touch with each other,
+so as to make one general and consistent South African
+system. But more important than the perfecting of
+existing arrangements must be the tapping of the rich
+and remote districts. Occasionally both needs may be
+exemplified in one line, but, roughly speaking, they
+are separate branches of railway policy, undertaken on
+different grounds and in many cases organised and
+financed on different methods. The experience of the
+United States, where railways were regarded as the
+cause and not the consequence of development, and
+pushed boldly into desert places which in a few years,
+through their agency, became centres of industry and
+population, is a safe guide, within limits, for South
+Africa, provided that the wealth to be exploited is
+really there, and railway extension does not cripple
+other works of equal necessity.</p>
+
+<p>Of the first class we have three chief examples.
+One&mdash;from Machadodorp to Ermelo&mdash;is already partially
+constructed. The second will run from Springs
+east to some point on this line, and so provide a direct
+route for the Johannesburg traffic from Delagoa Bay
+and avoid the awkward circuit by Pretoria. A further
+extension is projected by which the Springs-Ermelo
+line will be continued through Swaziland to Delagoa
+Bay and a complete alternative through route created.
+The third is the extension of the present Klerksdorp
+branch to Fourteen Streams, which would provide a
+shorter route from the Transvaal to the Cape, an infinitely
+shorter route from the Transvaal to Rhodesia,
+and would at the same time bring the coal districts of
+the country within reach of the diamond industry of
+Kimberley. In the second class there is no limit to
+the number of possible and desirable railways. The
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+most important is, perhaps, the grain line, from Bloemfontein
+to Johannesburg by Ficksburg, Bethlehem, and
+Wilge River, which would bring the great wheat-producing
+tracts of the Conquered Territory within easy
+reach of the chief market. Next comes the now completed
+Rand coal line from Vereeniging to Johannesburg.
+Another coal line is projected from Witbank
+on the Delagoa Bay line to Springs, which would
+bring the produce of the chief Transvaal collieries
+directly to the Rand and relieve the congested line
+between Elandsfontein and Pretoria. Of equal importance
+in the long-run is a line from Krugersdorp
+by Rustenburg to some point, such as Lobatsi, on the
+Rhodesian railway, which would open up a district
+famous for its fruits and tobacco, and give the pastoralists
+of Bechuanaland, as well as of the more
+distant Rhodesia, a straight line to Johannesburg.
+Other lines of the same class are those from Belfast
+or Machadodorp to Lydenburg, from Nelspruit to
+Pilgrims&rsquo; Rest, and from Basutoland to Bloemfontein.
+Lastly, and lastly only because of its greater difficulty,
+the line should be continued north from Pietersburg
+along the Sand River, brought east between the
+Spelonken and the Magatoland mountains, past the
+little township of Louis Trichard, and then turned
+south across the basin of the Klein and the Groot
+Letaba to Leydsdorp, where it could join the completed
+Selati railway from Komati Poort.</p>
+
+<p>The Railway Extension Conference held at Johannesburg
+in March 1903 sanctioned the immediate
+construction of most of the lines mentioned above, and
+recommended the others as objects to aim at when
+sufficient funds were at the disposal of the Government.
+As the share of the Guaranteed Loan allocated
+for railway extension is only some five millions, and as
+the proportion of any railway surplus which can be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+devoted to the purpose is, as we shall see later,
+strictly limited, it is highly desirable to make use of
+private enterprise so far as possible in new constructions,
+providing always for an efficient State
+oversight and an ultimate expropriation. The Klerksdorp-Fourteen
+Streams and the Krugersdorp-Lobatsi
+railways have already been arranged for on this
+principle, and it is probable that the experiment will
+be adopted in many of the smaller development lines.
+It is reasonable that a rich company, owning lands
+or mines, or requiring for its own purposes some
+special railway connection, should, if it desires a new
+line, undertake the financing of it. But at the
+same time the principle of the ultimate State
+ownership of all railways should be strictly adhered
+to, for the very good reason that in the railways
+we have the chief security for development loans, and
+the most productive of all the State assets. In few
+countries in the world is the expenditure on construction
+and maintenance so small, so that under
+present conditions they yield a handsome return on
+capital outlay. The Netherlands and the Pretoria-Pietersburg
+railways have been acquired from their
+former owners, and the incomplete Selati and
+Machadodorp-Ermelo lines will shortly follow. If we
+take the price paid, with the addition in the latter
+case of the outlay necessary for completion, as the
+capital value, we shall find that the net receipts, even
+after the large reductions in rates which have been
+made and must be maintained, show a generous percentage
+of profit.<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> It will be explained later what
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+part this important asset is called upon to play in
+the finance of the new colonies. So much for the
+main lines; but a system of light railways, constructed
+at small expense, is vital to the mineral and
+agricultural exploitation of such districts as Bethel,
+Lichtenburg, Wolmaranstad, and Waterberg, in the
+Transvaal and the southern part of the Orange River
+Colony. In a flat upland country, where animal
+transport for some years to come will be precarious
+and expensive, where the roads are still unsuitable
+for steam haulage, and where coal is cheap, perfect
+conditions exist for an extensive light-railway development.</p>
+
+<p>Railway extension, then, is one of the first demands
+of the country: it is comparatively easy to achieve,
+and most of the necessary capital has already been
+found for it. But the omnipresent labour difficulty
+appears here as elsewhere, not indeed with the magnitude
+of the mining problem, but with an equal insistence.
+To carry out the programme sketched
+above in any reasonable time, say three years, some
+40,000 natives will be required. At the present
+moment the number employed is scarcely 5000, and
+10,000 is the limit which the railways may recruit
+in South Africa by an agreement with the Chamber
+of Mines. Many natives, such as the Basutos, will
+work on railways when they will not go underground;
+and the agreed limit is fair enough to
+both parties. But the balance cannot be secured
+without seriously trespassing upon the supply grounds
+of the mines. The Uganda railway was built with
+imported labour, and it seems inevitable that the
+Central South African railways must follow suit.
+The limited funds at their disposal, and the difficulties
+in the way of the country&rsquo;s absorbing at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+the moment large numbers of unskilled workmen,
+make the employment of white navvies alone impossible.
+The railways, indeed, furnish a fine experimenting-ground
+for the importation of indentured
+foreign labour under a short-time contract and a
+condition of repatriation. The number they require
+is small: 10,000 will tide them over all immediate
+needs; the nature of the work enables a complete
+supervision to be exercised; and while it is still
+doubtful whether alien labour can be secured for the
+mines, experience has shown that for surface railway
+work the supply is certain. In the congested districts
+of India and China the small cultivator, to whom land
+is the object of his life, will gladly leave his home for
+one or two years if he can return with the money to
+buy a plot of ground; and when the return home is
+the cause of the setting out there will be no trouble
+in repatriation.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">The premier market, now and for many years, must
+be the Rand. Its great industrial population and the
+higher scale of living make it the natural market for
+all native agricultural and pastoral products. So
+much so that the farmers in the eastern province
+of Cape Colony, in spite of heavy railway rates, found
+it profitable to send the bulk of their produce thither.
+This is at once the advantage and misfortune of the
+country: advantage, in having an accessible market
+which it will take years to glut; misfortune, in that
+the merits of the market to the country producer
+mean costly living to the industrial inhabitants. The
+difficulty will no doubt adjust itself; for if, as all
+believe, the new colonies take many steps towards
+feeding themselves, and in consequence the prices of
+necessaries fall, new and nearer markets will arise in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+different parts of the country, and a genuinely self-supporting
+provincial society will be organised. New
+mining centres in the north and east, possibly, too, in
+the west, may bring new townships into being; old
+and semi-decayed dorps will revive; and that novelty
+in the new colonies, towns like Brighton or Cheltenham,
+which exist purely for residence, may yet be
+found at Warm Baths for winter, or on the shores of
+Lake Chrissie for the summer heats. The Rand,
+again, will be the chief market for the subsidiary
+industries which must arise,&mdash;for coal and iron, for
+manufactured articles and dressed produce. It is too
+early in the day to talk in any serious sense of exports.
+The Transvaal, at any rate, will be for long a
+consumer rather than a producer among the nations
+of the world.</p>
+
+<p>The tremendous cost of living is the subject of the
+chief complaints among new-comers to South Africa.
+Before the discovery of gold the Transvaal was a cheap
+country to dwell in. A bullock which now costs £20
+could be bought for £5; and a native, who now draws
+£3 or £4 per month in wages, was then very well
+content with 5s. Now there is hardly anything which
+is not scarcer and dearer in South Africa than in almost
+any other part of the globe. The causes of this high
+cost are partly natural and partly artificial; but all, I
+think, are terminable. The demands of the gold industry,
+the long distance from ports, the sparse rural
+population, are obvious natural causes, all of which
+tend to modification and mutual adjustment. The
+artificial causes are three: the cost of ocean freightage,
+the high railway rates, and the monopoly in the hands
+of a small mercantile class. The first can never be
+reduced below a fairly high figure, and in the loud
+complaint of &ldquo;shipping rings,&rdquo; which is in the mouth
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+of most traders, there is a little unfairness. It is too
+often the cloak which they use to cover their own
+extortions. But reductions will certainly be made,
+and in any case the chief force of the grievance, so far
+as necessaries are concerned, will decline with the
+growth of local production. Railway rates have already
+suffered a substantial decrease, and will be
+further reduced down to a certain point, which for
+the present is determined by the fiscal needs of the
+country. For railway rates are a form of taxation:
+the railways are the chief revenue producer, and to
+lower the rates too far would be merely robbing Peter
+to pay Paul&mdash;a form of relief which would need to
+be balanced by some new form of taxation. The chief
+efficient cause of the expense of living is undoubtedly
+the exorbitant monopoly of local merchants. It is no
+exaggeration to say that anything sold at 100 per cent
+profit is to the ordinary trader a form of charity:
+legitimate business begins for him at 120, or thereabouts.
+No class is so clamorous about its interests,
+so ready to identify its profits with national wellbeing,
+and claim a monopoly of the purer civic emotions.
+But no part of the economic situation is so radically
+unsound. The Polish Jew and the coolie make a profitable
+living throughout the country, not because the
+white population have no prejudice against them, but
+because they are driven to their stores by the comparative
+reasonableness of their prices. This cause, as
+I have said, is artificial and terminable. The influx
+of a large population will increase the area of competition,
+and reduce profits to a normal basis. And
+this, again, depends on the prosperity of the mines;
+so that we are brought round to the starting-point of
+all South African economics. Once this result were
+achieved its benefits would react on the mines, for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+with the decrease of the cost of living wages would go
+down, and what is at present an ideal&mdash;an increase in
+the area over which white labour can be employed&mdash;would
+come within the sphere of practical politics.</p>
+
+<p>The economic situation of the two colonies is therefore
+composed of a number of perplexing oppositions.
+The one certain fact is the great hidden wealth. But
+to make those riches actual there must be labour,
+and, over and above any question of imported and
+indentured workmen, to secure labour there must
+be reasonable cheapness in the necessaries of life and
+work. Customs tariffs, railway rates, general taxation,
+must all be calculated on a modest scale. But,
+on the other hand, if the country is to advance to
+that civilisation which is its due, money must be
+spent freely by the State on productive and unproductive
+enterprises; and in addition to such services,
+which are the basis of the Guaranteed Loan, there is
+the War Debt, 30 millions of dead-weight round the
+neck of a struggling people. To pay the interest
+on debts and to provide money for day-to-day needs
+there must be revenue, and so there comes a point
+where direct and indirect charges, whatever the
+demands of the situation, simply cannot be reduced
+further if the mechanism of Government is to continue
+in action. Heroic persons advocate heroic
+remedies, such as the cessation of all enterprise in
+favour of mining progress, or the renunciation of certain
+charges in favour of cheap living. In one sense
+all politics are a gamble; but there are limits beyond
+which statesmanship cannot go in the way of staking
+everything on a chance, and yet hope to justify itself
+in the eyes of the world in the event of failure. The
+real problem for the statesman is not how to plunge
+wildly&mdash;it requires little skill to do that&mdash;but how
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+to adjust with nice discrimination. To preserve an
+adequate revenue, while at the same time giving
+ample play to the forces of production, is, in a word,
+the only policy which contains the rudiments of ultimate
+success.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a>
+The latest information available on the subject of the Transvaal gold
+mines will be found in the exhaustive report prepared for Mr Chamberlain
+by the mining engineers, and published at Johannesburg in 1903.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a>
+The following are some of the working costs of the mines. Low
+costs: Geldenhuis Deep, 22s.; Geldenhuis Select, 17s. 6d.; Geldenhuis
+Main Reef, 17s. 4d.; Meyer and Charlton, 18s. 2d.; Simmer and Jack,
+20s. 7d. High costs: City and Suburban, 29s. 1d.; Bonanza, 27s. 6d.;
+Robinson Deep, 30s. 2d. The Robinson-Randfontein group have ore of
+a gold value of 34s. 9d. per ton, and a profit of 2s. over the working
+cost. The Bonanza has ore worth £5 a-ton.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a>
+Imported labour reduces itself in practice to Chinese or Japanese.
+Even supposing that the Indian Government consented to the strict form
+of indenture necessary for mining purposes, the political danger of introducing
+coolie labour into a country which already contains a considerable
+coolie population would be very great.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a>
+An argument often used in this connection is that the employment of
+Asiatic labourers, repatriated at the end of their contract, would mean
+that a very large sum of money annually left the country. But the
+same thing will happen if native African labour is brought from Central
+or Western Africa or Somaliland. It is happening at present with the
+natives from Portuguese territory, who form 90 per cent of the existing
+labour-supply.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a>
+I have said elsewhere that there are few South African problems
+which are not long-descended. The first proposal to introduce Chinese
+labour was made by Jan van Riebeck, the first Governor of Cape Colony,
+about the year 1653. He urged the scheme with great persistence, but
+home opinion proved too strong for him.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a>
+The cost of the acquisition of the present railway systems was
+roughly 14 millions. This does not, of course, represent an accurate
+statement of capital outlay, as in the Orange Free State considerable
+sums were spent out of State revenue. But even if we put the figure at
+the outside limit of 20 millions, the net profits are still more than 10
+per cent of the capital value.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h5>II.</h5>
+
+<p>The foregoing is a rough survey of the assets with
+which the new colonies start on their career. As
+in all beginnings, a multitude of questions protrude
+themselves. Every politician has his own nostrum,
+every interest its own pressing demands. But the
+main questions are simple, at least in their outlines,
+and it is permissible to disentangle from the web the
+chief threads of economic policy. Three postulates
+there must be before a solvent and progressive nation
+can be founded. In the first place, life must be made
+possible,&mdash;life on the various scales which a civilised
+society demands. In the second place, industries&mdash;the
+gold industry and the host of subsidiaries which
+must follow&mdash;should be given free scope for development
+by enlightened legislation, and the removal of
+burdens from the raw material of progress. Finally,
+a sufficient revenue must be secured to meet the vast
+reproductive expenditure which the country demands.
+To reconcile these three needs, which in practice
+often appear contradictory, is the task of the new
+Government.</p>
+
+<p>Taking the three axioms as our guide, we have to
+consider the two questions in all administration&mdash;the
+raising of revenue and the apportionment of expenditure.
+Our inquiry into revenue must be chiefly
+concerned with the Transvaal. The Orange River
+Colony is for the present prosperous, and its future
+solvency seems assured. With a certain income of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+half a million, and an expenditure of a little less, its
+fiscal problem is simplicity itself. But the Transvaal
+presents the case of a country with great potential
+wealth, which must borrow heavily to elicit its prosperity.
+Certain revenue-producing charges must be
+cut down to make life on a proper scale possible, but
+revenue must also be raised to make this life possible.
+It is the old story of Egypt&mdash;taking out of one pocket
+to put into the other, with somewhere behind the
+transaction an economic Providence to enhance values
+in the exchange. Such a policy is based upon a faith
+in the land, which by its productive power provides
+a natural sinking fund to wipe off encumbrances.
+Loans can be raised at 4 per cent, because the country
+repays a hundredfold.</p>
+
+<p>The main items, exclusive of railways, which in the
+financial year 1902-3 made up the revenue of the
+Transvaal, were customs revenue at upwards of two
+millions, mining revenue at half a million, stamp and
+transfer duties at £720,000, taxes on trades and professions
+and post and telegraphs at a quarter of a
+million each, and native revenue at a little over
+£300,000. The total revenue was about £4,700,000.
+The estimated revenue for 1903-4 has been put at
+£4,500,000, made up of customs at £1,800,000,
+mining revenue at £750,000, post and telegraphs at
+£360,000, taxes on trades and professions at £200,000,
+native revenue at £500,000, stamp and transfer duties
+at £700,000, and £200,000 for miscellaneous items.
+Since the object of the present inquiry is to estimate
+the financial position of the country, it is necessary in
+the first place to take the various sources of revenue
+one by one, and estimate their value and their defects.
+Several may at once be omitted. Post and telegraphs
+barely pay for their working expenses, and cannot be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
+counted upon as a source of revenue. Stamp and
+transfer duties, stand licences and rent, and the bulk
+of the miscellaneous items, are for the present static
+figures, or vary within narrow limits, and it is improbable
+that they will be altered so as to greatly
+increase their present revenue during the next few
+years. Revenue questions for the Transvaal are concerned
+with two items which far excel all others in
+importance&mdash;mining revenue and customs. There is
+a third, and the largest of the three, railway profits;
+but, as will be explained later, this item has been
+excluded from the separate budgets of the two
+colonies.</p>
+
+<p>The old mining revenue was mainly indirect. A tax
+on profits was indeed imposed by the late Government
+in February 1899, but war broke out before there was
+time to organise its collection. The real burden lay in
+the dynamite monopoly, which at its worst increased
+the price of explosives by £2 the case, and at its best
+by about 30s. The mines required an annual supply
+of 300,000 cases, which meant an annual charge,
+beyond the cost of material, of £450,000. The
+average net profits on the annual production of gold
+may be put at £6,000,000, which, with a 5 per cent
+profit tax, would return £300,000 a-year. Had the
+Boer <i>régime</i> continued, the mining industry would
+have contributed in the form of imposts something
+between £600,000 and £750,000 per annum (for a
+reduction of 10s. in the dynamite charge had been
+promised on the eve of the war). From the standpoint
+of the mines the whole sum was an impost, but
+only the yield from the profit tax would have found its
+way into the Exchequer.</p>
+
+<p>The present charges on the mining industry consist
+of the prospectors&rsquo; and diggers&rsquo; licences, the 10 per
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+cent tax on profits, imposed by Proclamation No. 34
+of 1902, and the cost of native passes, which was
+formerly paid by the native himself, but is now
+borne by the employer. The mining industry will
+therefore on its present basis pay from half a million
+upwards in profit tax, about £120,000 for native
+passes, and about £50,000 in licences. It is difficult
+to see how this taxation could be fairly increased.
+To add, for example, a charge of 20s. per case to
+explosives would be to tax the means of production,&mdash;a
+fatal heresy,&mdash;to keep some of the smaller
+mines out of the profit-making class, and in the long-run
+to harm the Exchequer itself. The true policy
+is not to hamper the earning of profits by excessive
+charges, but to enlarge by judicious encouragement
+the area over which profits are made. It is of
+the first importance that European capital should be
+attracted to, and not scared away from, the country.
+Under the present system the Government receipts
+will advance <i>pari passu</i> with any increase in the
+prosperity of the mines, and to secure the ultimate
+gain one may well be satisfied to forego a larger
+immediate return.</p>
+
+<p>There is a fourth source of revenue from mining
+enterprise which may be roughly described as windfalls.
+The Government has a moral right, which no one
+denies, to profit by new discoveries, and in any case,
+as a large landowner, it will be interested as an immediate
+participant. The provisions of the old Gold
+Law have been so often discussed in print that it is
+sufficient here to give the briefest sketch of them.
+Legislation by the late Government on precious
+minerals began as early as 1858, and continued in a
+long series of resolutions and counter-resolutions till
+the somewhat confused position of affairs was simplified
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+and regulated by the famous law, No. 15 of 1898.
+The basis of this law is to be found in the principle
+that to the owner belonged the ownership of minerals
+found under his land, but to the State the right of
+regulating their disposal. It attempted to give to
+both owner and State a fair share of the proceeds,
+while at the same time the prospector and discoverer
+received a moderate reward for their enterprise.
+There can be no question about the validity of the
+three rights; the only dispute is concerned with their
+relative proportions. Besides the matter of share,
+there is one other question of great importance&mdash;how
+far it is permissible for an owner to refuse to allow
+the exploital of minerals under his land.</p>
+
+<p>I take the last question first. Under the old law
+the owner of private property could prospect without
+a licence on his own land, and could give authority to
+any licensed person. If minerals were found, the State
+President, subject to certain compensation, could throw
+open the land as a public diggings. State land could
+be prospected and proclaimed in exactly the same way.
+But if the owner of private land refused to prospect
+himself or allow others to prospect, the State could not
+interfere to compel the exploital of his minerals. Much
+has been said of the right of the public in the shape of
+the prospector to go anywhere in his search; but no
+such <em>right</em> has ever existed or can exist. The whole
+question is one of policy. It is clearly not the interest
+of the State to leave the chief source of its wealth unworked;
+nor in any real sense is it the interest of the
+private owner. But it would be an intolerable burden
+to a farmer to be subjected to constant trespass by
+any prospector who cared to take out a licence. We
+must, however, clearly distinguish between Crown and
+private land, so far as the steps towards the discovery
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+of the minerals are concerned. Crown land, under
+strict conditions, should be free to any licensed prospector;
+but, as the settlement of Crown land by
+agricultural tenants is a vital part of Government
+policy, provision must be made for ample compensation
+to such a tenant for disturbance caused by prospecting.
+Such provision should refer not only to unproclaimed
+or hereafter to be proclaimed Crown land, but should
+be brought to cover areas such as Barberton, Lydenberg,
+and the Wood Bush, which have been long
+working gold-fields. If compensation and security is
+not provided, some of the most valuable agricultural
+and pastoral lands in the country will be incapable of
+white settlement, and their only occupants will be the
+Kaffir, the coolie, and the bywoner, who have no
+interest in creating permanent homes. It is undesirable
+to tie up minerals, but it is equally undesirable
+to tie up agricultural wealth. People have talked of
+proclamation as if it were an inviolable contract between
+the Crown and the public, to which no new
+conditions could be added. There is neither legal nor
+historical justification for this view. It is right for
+the Crown, having given permission to the public to
+go upon its lands for a particular purpose, to impose
+from time to time conditions under which the permission
+may be exercised. On private lands the case
+is different. No owner of a private farm who is in
+beneficial occupation of it (when he is not, the land
+should be treated for this purpose as Crown land)
+should be compelled to allow prospecting unless he
+has already himself prospected or given authority to
+others. To enact otherwise would be to make a freehold
+title little more than a farce. But in order to
+prevent a reactionary or indolent owner from tying up
+valuable minerals for an indefinite time, when there
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+are reasonable grounds for believing that such minerals
+exist, the Commissioner of Mines should have the
+power to give notice to the owner that he must
+prospect or allow others to do so, and, if he still refuses,
+to issue to the public a small number of prospecting
+licences on the property. When prospecting has taken
+place, and, after an investigation by the Government,
+minerals are found to exist in payable quantities, the
+area, subject to all rights of compensation, should be
+proclaimed a public digging.</p>
+
+<p>Under the old law the discoverer, if his discovery
+were made at least six miles distant from a locality
+already worked, was entitled to mark off six claims
+which he could work without payment of licence-moneys.
+He had also the ordinary public right of
+pegging off not more than fifty claims in the proclaimed
+area, and fifty additional claims on payment
+of reduced licences. The only real reward to the prospector
+for his trouble and expense was the six free
+claims&mdash;hardly a sufficient inducement to undertake
+laborious, and often costly, enterprises. The Gold
+Law Commission recommended that the discoverer
+should receive one-thirtieth of the proclaimed area,
+provided that in no case such one-thirtieth exceeded
+thirty claims. This seems a reasonable but not extravagant
+honorarium to the pioneer. He would be entitled
+to the first selection, and would hold his claims
+free of licence-moneys till they reached the producing
+stage.</p>
+
+<p>The owner, under the old law, was entitled to
+reserve a <i>mynpacht</i>, equal to one-tenth of the proclaimed
+area, for which he paid either 10s. per morgen
+per annum or 2&frac12; per cent of his gross profits. He
+was also entitled to mark off a <i>werf</i> or homestead
+area, on which prospecting was forbidden; and on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+this, too, he could claim a <i>mynpacht</i> from the State.
+He was entitled to a certain number of owner&rsquo;s claims,
+which could not exceed ten. He was entitled, before
+proclamation, to grant to other persons a certain
+number of claims called <i>vergunnings</i>. Finally, he
+was entitled to share equally with the Government in
+all licence-moneys on claims, and to receive a share,
+varying from one-half to three-fourths, of all licence-moneys
+on stands. This system gave the owner
+about one-sixth of the whole proclaimed area,&mdash;an
+extravagant share, and one complicated by the curious
+rights into which it was divided. Such unmeaning
+complexity must be abolished, and one form of title
+&mdash;claim licences&mdash;substituted. <i>Werf</i> and <i>vergunning</i>
+claims should be done away with, and the
+owner, as the Commission recommended, be allowed
+to peg out one-seventh of the proclaimed area, which
+should take the place of <i>werf</i>, <i>mynpacht</i>, <i>vergunnings</i>,
+and owner&rsquo;s claims. The Commission has also recommended
+that, while the owner should retain half of
+the proceeds of licences, the Crown should have the
+right, without consulting him, to remit or reduce the
+licence-moneys in what appear to be deserving cases.</p>
+
+<p>The State, under the old law, received all licence-moneys
+on claims and stands situated on State lands,
+and half the licence-moneys from claims and stands
+on private lands. It received also certain payments
+from the owners of <i>mynpachts</i>. This in itself should
+provide for a considerable revenue. But in addition
+the Crown should have the right of sale of claims
+in proved districts, where the ground has a certain
+value. The former method, in places where pegging
+was out of the question, such as along the Main Reef,
+was to hold a claims&rsquo; lottery, a method which was
+neither rational nor lucrative. The sale by auction
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+of claims in proved districts would bring in a large
+additional revenue and do no injustice to the prospector.
+But in all places yet unproved the public
+should be free to peg out claims and try their
+fortune. It is important, also, to revise the present
+system of licence-moneys, so as to make the licences
+small during the prospecting and non-producing
+period, and raise them when mining actually begins.
+Under the old law all licences were £1 per claim
+per month, a payment which bore heavily upon the
+poor prospector who was still labouring to prove his
+claim. Prospectors&rsquo; licences were issued at 5s. per
+month on private land and 2s. 6d. on Government
+land. The Commission recommended the abolition
+of prospectors&rsquo; licences, and the substitution of one
+general licence to search for minerals, on which a
+stamp duty of 2s. 6d. per month should be charged.
+When minerals are found and a public digging has
+been proclaimed, licence-moneys of 2s. 6d. per claim
+per month should be paid on Government land, and
+5s. on private land till the producing stage is reached.
+After that date the old licence of £1 would come
+into force.</p>
+
+<p>The Transvaal Legislature will shortly be called
+upon to consider a new Gold Law based on the report
+of the Commission, of which I have sketched the
+chief features. Of almost equal importance, in the
+light of recent discoveries, is the new Diamond Law,
+where substantially the same questions of principle
+are involved. Owner, discoverer, and State should
+have a fair share of profit&mdash;but especially the State.
+We are none too well off in the ordinary course
+of things to be able to afford to neglect our windfalls.
+A serious and permanent increase of revenue
+can come only from a gradual increase of producing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+activity; but, apart from permanent needs, many
+occasions will arise for capital expenditure in reproductive
+works which are vital to progress. A
+windfall is a development loan without guarantee
+or interest or sinking fund to burden the mind of
+the Exchequer.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">The other direct taxes are so few and unimportant
+that they may safely be neglected. But it is necessary
+to face the question of adjustment and new
+taxation, for the time may come when it may be
+expedient to lower many of the existing duties and
+to revise thoroughly railway rates, and it is desirable
+to have alternative proposals to meet the decline of
+revenue which will follow. It may be desirable, for
+instance, to abolish wholly the present charge on
+dynamite, as it most certainly will be necessary to
+lower still further the cost of transit on the railways.
+But new taxation must be imposed with the greatest
+caution. The present population of the Transvaal
+pays in indirect taxes £10 a-head as against £2 at
+home; the field for direct taxation is therefore strictly
+circumscribed. To certain taxes the road is barred.
+A land tax, however light, would bear heavily upon
+the impoverished rural districts, and in any case is
+impossible under the Terms of Surrender. An income
+tax would make life unbearable if the limit of exemption
+were low, and if the limit were high the yield
+would be inconsiderable. A general profit tax on the
+earnings of both companies and individuals may become
+feasible in time, but we must first await the
+return of normal conditions of life. One way may be
+found in increased native taxation, a matter which,
+as it is bound up with other questions of native policy,
+is discussed in another chapter. But the object of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+all new taxation must be to strike at the untaxed
+and unproductive elements in society, for reasons
+quite as much political as economic. On this ground
+two taxes seem just and desirable, though there are
+certain obvious difficulties to be surmounted before
+they can be levied. The first is a tax upon unoccupied
+lands, a quite possible and equitable tax which
+would meet with little real opposition. Land companies
+in the Transvaal alone possess some 12 million
+acres, the bulk of which has been bought for supposed
+mineral values. Not 10 per cent of the land is
+occupied, and nearly 50 per cent is capable of occupation
+of some kind. Quite apart from revenue considerations,
+a tax which would compel settlement, or,
+failing that, would drive some of the more obstinate
+companies to put good land in the market, would be
+sound policy. What applies to the companies would
+apply to the private landowner who has his half-dozen
+farms, and lives in a corner of one of them.
+<i>Latifundia</i> bid fair to be among the curses of the
+land, unless proper measures are taken to check them
+in time; and if this is done, the land troubles of the
+Australian colonies and their confiscatory legislation
+will be saved to South Africa. The machinery would
+be simple. A permanent commission would have to
+be established (the judicial committee of the Central
+Land Board, provided for in the Settler&rsquo;s Ordinance,
+could do the work). Each owner of unoccupied land
+would be summoned before it to state his case. He
+might show that three-fourths of his land was at the
+moment incapable of occupation, in which case he
+would only be assessed on the remainder. The tax
+might be an <i>ad valorem</i> tax of 2 or 3 per cent. A
+day might be fixed, say eighteen months from assessment,
+when the tax would come into operation. In
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+case owners proved refractory and preferred to pay
+the tax, it might be increased on a sliding scale till
+settlement became compulsory. There would be no
+hardship to company or individual, since only land
+for which a white occupier could be found would be
+assessable for the purpose. The second tax is of equal
+importance but far greater complexity. The most difficult
+person to reach in taxation is the holder for the
+rise, the speculator who is nothing else, the great
+class which toils and spins not and grows fat on the
+energy of others. The basis of his activity is the
+quotation of shares, and a tax to affect him must be
+in relation to such market values. You cannot introduce
+a too cumbrous machinery without acting in
+restraint of legitimate trade, quite apart from the
+fact that most of the business is done with bearer
+shares which pass through fifty hands before registration.
+But it might be possible&mdash;it is a problem
+for a revenue expert to decide&mdash;to affect this class
+indirectly and curtail its activity by a tax on the
+profits of companies based on the average quotation
+for the preceding year. At the best it would be only
+a half measure, for it would be limited to dividend-paying
+companies, and the energies of the middleman
+are chiefly exercised on companies whose profits are
+still wholly speculative. But with all deductions
+there seems to be a chance of revenue in such a tax,
+and a certain general economic value. The tax, again,
+would be limited to new issues, for in the case of old
+issues, even when the shares stand at 1000 per cent
+premium, a high dividend may represent a very
+moderate dividend on the capital of the investor who
+bought in when shares were high. If the dividend of
+a new issue justified a high quotation, the quotation
+would be high in spite of the tax, but the existence
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+of the tax would tend to keep down the speculative
+quotation to some reasonable relation to former dividends.
+If dividends declined, and the quotation fell,
+the tax would go automatically out of existence. Such
+a tax, if possible, would not yield in normal years a
+great revenue, but it would have certain salutary and
+permanent effects. It would touch companies only in
+a high state of prosperity. It would indirectly touch
+the man who buys not for dividends but to realise
+by taking away in some part the basis of his speculations.
+It would exercise a steadying influence upon
+the market, and prevent, at least in one class of
+security, fictitious rises. But as a means of revenue
+its position would be really that of a windfall, for it
+would enable the Crown to profit largely out of any
+period of great financial excitement. A boom, so
+eagerly desired by all but in many of its results so
+maleficent, might be delayed by its agency; and if it
+came, as no doubt it would in spite of any ingenious
+taxation, and share values became blindly inflated
+irrespective of past or present dividends, the Government
+would perform that rarest of feats, and derive
+an honest profit from the vices of the multitude.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">The Transvaal, till the other day, was the only
+important South African state not included in the
+Customs Union. Its customs law was No. 4 of 1894,
+amended by Ordinance 22 of 1902. The basis was an
+<i>ad valorem</i> tax of 7&frac12; per cent on all goods brought
+across the border, with an addition of 20 per cent to
+the valuation price for the purpose of the tax in the
+case of goods directly imported from over-sea. The
+purpose of this provision is obvious, since to goods
+bought at the coast the cost of over-sea freightage and
+handling is added in reaching the price on which the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+tax is assessed. But to this general duty there were
+two important exceptions. There was a lengthy free
+list, which included, in addition to goods imported for
+Government use, all live stock, books, tree, flower,
+and vegetable seeds and plants, tools and effects of
+immigrant mechanics, fencing material, mining and
+agricultural machinery, cement, and unmanufactured
+woods. There was also a list on which, in addition to
+the general 7&frac12; per cent, special duties were charged.
+Beer paid 3s. per gallon, dynamite 9d. per pound,
+gunpowder 6d. per pound, spirits from 14s. to £1 per
+imperial gallon, manufactured tobacco 3s. per pound,
+leaf-tobacco 2s. per pound (when brought from over-sea),
+wine from 4s. to 12s. 6d. per gallon. The tariff
+was therefore moderately protectionist. Most articles
+necessary for the great industries were free; articles
+of common use were subject only to the <i>ad valorem</i>
+duty; while articles of luxury, and especially all
+fermented liquors, were subject to a fair but not
+excessive special tax.</p>
+
+<p>The difficulty was that the tariff was not a fair
+guide to the real taxation of imports. The Transvaal
+has no seacoast; all her imports have to be landed
+at the ports of other colonies or states, and carried
+to her borders by alien railways. Moreover, all
+the seaboard colonies, as well as the Orange River
+Colony, were banded together in a Customs Union,
+from which she was excluded. A tariff hostility
+was therefore smouldering on, which gave acute
+annoyance to the Transvaal importer. I will take
+two instances of purely predatory imposts. The coast
+colonies levied a so-called transit due of 3 per cent on
+dutiable articles for the Transvaal, a due which was
+the same in principle as the levies which the barons
+of the Rhine used to make from the harmless merchants
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+passing through their borders. Again, in the
+case of the Orange River Colony, the only inland
+colony in the old Customs Union, the duties were
+collected at the coast ports, and a collecting charge
+was made, which was simply another form of the
+transit due. At one time the charge was as high
+as 25 per cent of the duties collected; but on the
+petition of the Orange River Colony it was afterwards
+reduced to 15 per cent. How far such a rate was
+from representing the real cost of collection is shown
+by the fact that the Transvaal duties were collected
+by the coast colonies from the occupation of Pretoria
+to the end of 1901 at a charge of only 2&frac12; per cent.</p>
+
+<p>The Transvaal had thus a tariff in itself reasonable,
+but she was embarrassed by her isolation. It was
+obviously desirable that she should enter into the
+Customs Union, which would then comprise the whole
+of South Africa, for if federation is ever to become
+a serious policy it is well to begin by throwing down
+economic barriers. But economics have an awkward
+way of overriding all other considerations, and the
+entrance of the Transvaal into the Union could only
+be a matter of hard business&mdash;give and take on both
+sides. The interest of the two parties was on this
+matter far apart. The coast colonies are agricultural
+and pastoral, and their ports are forwarding depots.
+They are frankly protectionist, and their customs have
+always been their chief source of revenue. The Transvaal
+is industrial, and for the present a free-trader;
+she must have cheap food, cheap raw material, cheap
+necessaries. While at the moment customs form the
+largest item in her revenue, it does not overshadow
+all others, and in time it is probable that it will sink
+to a second place. The question was, therefore, What
+of her present tariff would the Transvaal relinquish to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+meet the wishes of the Union, and what compensating
+advantages could she expect from her membership?</p>
+
+<p>The Bloemfontein Conference of March 1903 prepared
+a Customs Convention, which has since been
+ratified by the several states, and the old Customs
+Union has been amended and extended to include the
+whole of British South Africa. How far has this act
+improved the economic position of the Transvaal? In
+the first place, there is one solid gain, the abolition of
+the transit dues, estimated at between £250,000 and
+£300,000 per annum. There is, too, a gain in the
+mere fact of union, and the freedom which it gives
+from the incessant bickerings of conflicting tariffs.
+Since her duties are collected by the coast colonies at
+the moderate charge of 5 per cent, a saving may also
+be effected by the reduction of the customs establishment
+on her borders. The benefit which she has conferred
+in return is the opening of her markets without
+restraint to the products of British South Africa, an
+opening which should amply repay the coast colonies
+for the reduction in the protective tariff from over-sea.
+The actual tariff charges are in the nature of
+an elaborate compromise. To take first the case of
+the simple food-stuffs. In 1898, under the old
+Transvaal tariff, imported flour paid in duty £26,955,
+and imported mealies £16,290. Under the old Union
+tariff they would have paid respectively £114,068 and
+£69,332&mdash;a difference of over 400 per cent. The old
+Union rate was 2s. per 100 lb. for grain and 4s. 6d.
+per 100 lb. for flour, while the old Transvaal rate was
+an <i>ad valorem</i> duty of about 9 per cent. It was
+impossible that either party could accept the other&rsquo;s
+rate, so the present solution of 1s. for grain and 2s.
+for flour may be taken as a satisfactory compromise,
+which an industrial country could support. It must
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+be further remembered that all food-stuffs produced
+elsewhere in South Africa enter free, and that the
+cost of bread under the new system will be if anything
+reduced. Article XV. of the Convention gives
+the Transvaal a further power in times of scarcity to
+suspend the duty on food-stuffs altogether, and give
+a bonus to imports of the same class produced in the
+neighbouring colonies. The ordinary manufactured
+article, which in a non-manufacturing country plays
+as large a part in the cost of living as bread, is also
+reduced for the purchaser. It pays an <i>ad valorem</i>
+duty of 10 per cent, which at first sight seems higher
+than the old rate of 7&frac12;, which with other charges
+worked out in practice at about 9. But 2&frac12; per cent
+must be deducted on account of the 25 per cent preferential
+rate for British goods, and with the abolition
+of the transit dues the actual duty will work out at
+between 7 and 8 per cent. Raw material and the
+necessaries of industry remain much where they were
+under the old tariff, which was highly favourable to
+them; but the charge on dynamite has been reduced
+from 9d. a-pound to 1&frac12;d., which is a reduction of over
+30s. on the 50-lb. case.</p>
+
+<p>A mere comparison of tariffs does not show the real
+cheapening of the necessaries of life; for to get at the
+practical effect, the abolition of the transit dues, the
+reduction of railway rates, amounting to at least
+£300,000 per annum, and the preference rate on
+British goods, must all be considered. Under the old
+tariff and railway rates every 100 lb. of flour from
+Port Elizabeth to the Transvaal paid 9d. to the
+Transvaal in duty. The freight was 6s. 2d., so that
+it paid altogether in charges 6s. 11d. Under the
+Convention the same quantity of flour will pay 2s.
+in duty and 3s. 9d. in railway rates, so that, in spite
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+of the higher duty, the charge is only 5s. 9d.,&mdash;a
+saving to the Transvaal consumer of 1s. 2d., and a
+gain to the Transvaal treasury of 1s. 3d. There
+are many instances of a similar kind. Ordinary
+groceries will be reduced by about 3 per cent, paraffin
+by 1s. 6d. a case, grease by 2s. 6d. per 100 lb., cement
+by 2s. 9d. a cask. Tea and coffee, on the other hand,
+show a slight increase. In one branch there is a very
+marked increase, and an exception to the inter-colonial
+free trade, which is the basis of the Convention.
+Each party to the Union is entitled to levy on the
+importation of spirits distilled in and from the produce
+of places within the Union a duty equal to any
+excise duty which it may levy on spirits made within
+its own borders. In the Transvaal there is no excise,
+for the manufacture of spirits is wholly forbidden. It
+is of the most urgent importance to keep fermented
+liquors out of reach of the native population, and to
+suppress all illicit traffic. The importation of Portuguese
+spirits has been stopped by treaty, and it was
+clearly impossible for the Transvaal to consent to the
+importation of spirits on easier terms from the other
+British colonies. The concluding paragraph of Article
+XVII., therefore, provides that &ldquo;where a prohibition
+exists in any colony or territory of the Union against
+the manufacture of spirits for sale, it shall be lawful
+for such colony or territory to levy on spirits produced
+within the Union a custom duty not exceeding that
+levied on similar spirits produced outside the Union.&rdquo;
+The duty in force is therefore from 15s. to £1 per
+imperial gallon in addition to the 10 per cent <i>ad
+valorem</i> rate; which, it has been calculated, is an
+increase on the former cost of from 4s. to 6s. per
+case.</p>
+
+<p>The new Union is therefore almost wholly in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+favour of the new colonies. The cost to the consumer
+is lessened, but the revenue does not lose appreciably,
+since charges, formerly diverted by the coast colonies,
+now go to its coffers. The coast colonies, in an admirable
+spirit of statesmanship, have consented to surrender
+a part of their revenue in order that the chief
+industrial market of South Africa might be open to
+their people&mdash;an example of that policy of foregoing
+certain revenues on a narrow basis for the sake of
+a possible revenue in a wider field which is of the
+essence of good government. The preference given
+to British goods, while still further reducing rates
+in favour of a large class of imports, is also a step
+towards federation, which does not, as such experiments
+are apt to do, militate in any serious way
+against local commerce. The one person who might
+complain is the farmer of the Transvaal, who sees
+his markets thrown open to the old grain-lands of
+Cape Colony; but if the long railway journey which
+his rivals have to face is not a sufficient handicap
+to enable him to hold his own, then we need not
+lament his fall. Vital as agricultural progress is, it
+cannot hope for protection at the expense of industrial
+prosperity.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">The normal expenditure of the Transvaal may be
+taken roughly at £3,600,000. This figure is exclusive
+of debt charges, or any capital outlay on development
+which may be met out of revenue. It represents
+merely the day-to-day cost of the administrative
+machine. As revenue is enlarged the expenditure
+will follow suit; but it is unlikely that the proportion
+of costs to receipts, which is roughly three to four, will
+ever increase. On the contrary, it might be considerably
+reduced by a more complete administrative
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+decentralisation. At present there are a number of
+isolated departments&mdash;Native Affairs, Lands, Mines&mdash;with
+local representatives wholly independent of each
+other, and responsible only to the heads of their departments.
+The resident magistrate, who is really an
+administrative official, since the legal work is done by
+the assistant magistrate, and who as a rule is not a
+lawyer, has a very narrow control over a few subjects
+like local government and public health. The system
+is wasteful both of money and energy, for the isolated
+departments often overlap unconsciously; and since
+there is no local check, the tendency is for the head of
+a department to increase his local staff and to vie with
+other heads in securing large estimates. It also means
+that a constant inspection has to be kept up from
+headquarters, and each department supports a force of
+travelling officials. The Indian precedent might be
+followed with advantage, and real heads of districts
+established, who would have a control, direct or indirect,
+over all administrative work. They should be
+responsible for the efficient and economic working of
+their district, prepare their local estimates and reports,
+and answer for their work only to the Governor and
+Council. The great departments would exist as before,
+but their local staffs would be much reduced in number,
+so far as such staffs were administrative and not intrusted
+with expert work. Experts, such as inspectors
+of machinery, customs officers, and veterinary surgeons,
+would remain directly responsible to their own departments,
+though over these also the district administrator
+would exercise a general supervision. In this way a
+very considerable saving would be effected in salaries,
+the unnecessarily large force of travelling inspectors
+could be reduced, and the friction which inevitably
+attends the working of isolated and independent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+officials in any district would be saved by the establishment
+of responsible heads,&mdash;deputy administrators,
+whose business it would be to supervise all district
+Government work, and control all local expenditure.</p>
+
+
+<h5>III.</h5>
+
+<p>The natural assets of the country and the existing
+fiscal system have been roughly sketched in the foregoing
+pages. It remains to consider what burden these
+two factors in collaboration are called upon to bear.
+In view of the peculiar situation of the new colonies,
+the necessity of a loan for development is sufficiently
+obvious. The country was desolated by war. Large
+sums were necessary for compensation to loyalists and
+for the repatriation of the Dutch inhabitants. The
+backward system of our predecessors had left public
+works ill provided for in most places, particularly in
+the country districts. If the wealth of the provinces,
+mineral and agricultural, was to be exploited, and the
+existing industries granted reasonable facilities for
+progress, a heavy expenditure was imperative for
+railway extension. If the rural parts were to be
+developed and their population leavened with our
+own countrymen, considerable sums must be expended
+on settlement, and on such reproductive schemes as
+forestry and irrigation. Finally, certain heavy liabilities
+awaited the incoming Government. To buy
+out the existing railways and repay certain military
+debts and advances from the Imperial Treasury, fully
+14 millions were required. The old debt of the Transvaal,
+amounting to 2&frac12; millions, which carried 4 per
+cent interest, must be paid off, and the capital required
+for the repayment made part of a new loan at an
+easier rate. The liabilities and needs of the country
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+stood therefore as follows: An advance by the Imperial
+Government to cover the estimated Transvaal
+deficit of 1901-2, £1,500,000; the old debt of the
+Transvaal, £2,500,000; compensation to loyalists in
+Cape Colony and Natal, £2,000,000; the acquisition
+of the railways and the repayment of the
+existing railway debt, £14,000,000; repatriation<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>
+and compensation in the new colonies, £5,000,000;
+railway extension, £5,000,000; land settlement,
+£3,000,000; various public works, £2,000,000,&mdash;a
+total of £35,000,000. This is the sum comprised in
+the famous Guaranteed Loan.</p>
+
+<p>But this figure, large as it is, does not exhaust our
+burden. During the year 1901 and 1902 the question
+of the contribution of the new colonies to the imperial
+war debt was keenly discussed both in South Africa
+and in England. Some fixed the payment likely to
+be required at as much as £100,000,000; others argued
+that the new colonies were likely to have so many
+burdens of their own that they could not be called
+upon to contribute at all. Moderate men on both
+sides saw that some contribution was equitable, but
+asked that it should not be fixed so high as to cripple
+development. There were various proposals, such as
+the ear-marking of certain sources of revenue and all
+windfalls, or the allocating of a certain proportion of
+any annual surplus; but such schemes were liable to
+the objection from the side of the Imperial Government
+that there was no certainty in the contribution,
+and from the side of the new colonies that there was
+no finality in the liability. The settlement which Mr
+Chamberlain announced in his speech at Johannesburg
+in January 1903 was, perhaps, the best possible
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+in the circumstances. The contribution was fixed at
+£30,000,000, to be raised in three years by contributions
+of £10,000,000 per annum. The first 10
+millions at 4 per cent were underwritten without commission
+by the great financial houses of the Rand, and
+there is no reason to doubt that if they are called to
+make good their guarantee, it will prove a profitable
+investment. It is difficult to overestimate the merit
+of an arrangement which tends to bind the great
+houses to a closer interest in the general development
+of the country. The War Loan was secured wholly
+upon the Transvaal, but there is a contingent liability
+on the Orange River Colony to pay a further sum of
+£5,000,000 out of the Government share of any
+discoveries of precious stones and metals.</p>
+
+<p>We have, therefore, to face a total debt of
+£65,000,000, of which 35 millions at 3 per cent are
+a charge upon both colonies, and 30 millions at 4
+per cent upon the Transvaal alone. It is a heavy
+responsibility for a white population of a few
+hundreds of thousands, face to face with a labour
+problem. That the world at large believes in the
+future of the country is shown by the way in
+which the Guaranteed Loan was taken up, the first
+30 millions having been subscribed more than thirty
+times over. On this loan the interest charge, with
+1 per cent sinking fund, will amount to an annual
+payment of £1,400,000: in three years time the
+War Loan, unless (which is probable) it can be issued
+at a lower rate than 4 per cent, will mean an annual
+charge of £1,200,000, with no sinking fund allowed.
+We have therefore in front of us a possible annual
+payment of £2,600,000, with a slight increase in the
+future when a sinking fund is provided. The payment,
+large in itself, was made more difficult by the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+circumstances of the two colonies. The larger loan
+is secured on both, but while the Orange River Colony
+had a fair claim to a considerable part of the proceeds,
+it was clearly impossible that she should pay a share
+of the charge proportionate to her receipts. If she
+shared in the loan only to the extent of the annual
+contribution which on her small revenue she could
+afford, many important public works both of land
+settlement and railway extension would have to be
+abandoned. Joined with this general administrative
+difficulty, there was a departmental one connected
+with the railways. The main line through the Orange
+River Colony had acquired, as one of the main feeders
+of the Transvaal, a purely fictitious value, and the
+Orange River Colony profited greatly by the receipts.
+But to have within one system two types of line,
+one a through line simply, the other connected
+directly with the great centres of production and
+consumption, and to have those two types of lines
+used as revenue-producing agents for two different
+administrations, was to make a consistent railway
+policy impossible. The country of the through line,
+whose fictitious value produced a very real revenue,
+would reclaim against reduction in rates for the
+benefit of the other.</p>
+
+<p>Both difficulties have been met by a very ingenious
+scheme. The Inter-Colonial Council of the two
+colonies, created by Order in Council of 20th May
+1903, is significant in many ways, notably as the
+first overt step towards federation; but for the
+present we may look upon it purely as a financial
+expedient. Two important departments, common to
+both colonies, were placed wholly under the administration
+of the Council&mdash;the Central South African
+Railways and the South African Constabulary; and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+a number of minor common services, such as surveys
+and education, were added, and power was given to
+the two legislatures to increase the number when
+they saw fit. A Railway Committee of Council
+forms the permanent controlling authority in all
+railway matters. All net profits of the railways
+in each year are assigned to Council to form its
+revenues. Out of these it has to meet the expenditure
+of the Constabulary and the minor common
+charges, as well as the annual charge and management
+costs of the Guaranteed Loan.<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
+
+<p>The financial duties of the Council are therefore
+twofold. It has the entire administration of the
+Loan in its hands, it provides for its apportionment
+among the different services, and it undertakes the
+payment of its charges. It has also to meet the
+administrative expenditure of the common departments
+intrusted to it, and for this purpose it receives
+the net profits of the chief revenue-producing asset
+of the two Governments. The first duty is comparatively
+simple. A body composed of official and
+unofficial representatives of the two parties to the
+Loan can allocate speedily and equitably without the
+constant strife and jealousy which would attend the
+interference of two different publics. But the second
+duty, which is concerned with the annual inter-colonial
+budget, constitutes the index or barometer
+of the new colony finances. The Budget for 1903-4
+shows the following figures: on the revenue side,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
+£2,350,000 from the net railway receipts; on the
+expenditure side, £1,441,000 for the service of the
+Guaranteed Loan,<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> £1,520,000 for the Constabulary,
+and about £70,000 for minor common services. This
+leaves a deficit of about £680,000, which, according to
+the term of the Order in Council, will be met by contributions
+from the Transvaal and the Orange River
+Colony in proportion to their customs receipts&mdash;roughly,
+£600,000 from the first, and £80,000 from the second.</p>
+
+<p>Let us take the revenue side of the Budget first.
+The position of the railways is anomalous. They are
+virtually a taxing-machine, and in this respect the
+most effective of Government properties. The normal
+position of a Government railway should be that
+of an institution worked for the public benefit, the
+receipts being little in excess of the working costs
+plus a moderate interest on the capital involved. In
+this railway system the net profits, as we have seen,
+are estimated for next year, allowing for the half-million
+decrease from the reduction of rates, at
+£2,300,000. No doubt it is economically unsound to
+levy a tax of such magnitude on what is virtually a
+necessity of life and a constituent of production. But
+bad economics may be sound statesmanship, if they
+are recognised as unsound&mdash;a temporary expedient
+to obviate a more serious difficulty. Railway profits
+are the buttress of inter-colonial finance: without
+them there is no satisfactory provision for the debt
+charges, and some form of direct taxation, which
+would interfere far more effectively with nascent
+industries, would be the only resort. The rates have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+been already reduced so as to provide, along with
+the new customs tariff, for a very real decrease in
+the cost of living. They will be still further reduced,
+always keeping a limit in view which is calculated
+on fiscal needs. To so adjust the rates that industrial
+and rural development will not be hindered, and at
+the same time to provide an adequate revenue,
+presents a very pretty problem in railway finance.
+It is the problem in the customs; it is the problem
+in direct taxation; it is the essence of the economic
+problem of the country. But with all reductions
+there is a good chance of railway revenue increasing.
+The 5 millions of the Loan which go to development
+will in a year or two bear fruit. It is difficult to see
+how the net profits can ever fall below £2,100,000,
+while it is not unreasonable to hope that in a few
+years they may rise to £2,500,000 or £3,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>But while the revenue side is likely to increase,
+the expenditure side of the Budget will inevitably
+decline. When the full loan is raised the annual
+charge will be £1,408,000, a stationary figure till
+the loan is redeemed. The Council is a genuine
+<i>Caisse de la Dette</i>; its revenues are charged in the
+first instance with the loan charges, and the liability
+of the separate colonies to make up any deficiency
+distributes the weight of the debt equitably among
+the parties to it. The danger of a <i>Caisse</i>, that it
+tends to check general prosperity by a too arbitrary
+appropriation of revenue, is avoided by the very
+strict conditions of the Council&rsquo;s power and the nature
+of its constitution. The minor common services will
+not increase, and they may very probably decrease,
+as such branches as surveys and permits shrink to
+normal limits. The large item of 1&frac12; million for the
+Constabulary will be lowered in future to about
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
+£1,200,000, which, on the present establishment, must
+be regarded as a final figure. We may, therefore,
+take £2,500,000 as the average expenditure in two
+years&rsquo; time, which, if railway receipts increase to a
+like figure in the same time, would make the Inter-Colonial
+Budget balance.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime the Transvaal is able to pay any
+contribution which may be required from her. But
+in two years all or the greater part of the War
+Loan will have been raised, and she may have to
+face a maximum annual charge of £1,200,000, which
+contains no provision for any sinking fund. In
+these circumstances, on her present revenue she
+could pay nothing towards any inter-colonial deficit:
+she might even have to ask for a contribution.
+There is every probability that such help could
+be given, and an automatic system of adjustment
+might be framed by which any inter-colonial
+surplus could go to pay the charges or assist in the
+creation of a sinking fund for the War Loan. This is
+of course on the most unfavourable assumption,&mdash;that
+the War Loan has to be raised at 4 per cent, that the
+present industrial depression continues, and that the
+Transvaal gets no increase of revenue from that prosperity
+which she has a right to expect. It is far
+more probable that the Council will be free to devote
+any surplus it may show to the development of the
+common services, for which the Loan provision cannot
+in the long-run be found adequate.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a>
+This figure does not cover the expense of repatriation. There was a
+free gift for the purpose of £5,000,000 by the Imperial Government.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a>
+The Council is composed of the High Commissioner and Governor
+(President), the two Lieutenant-Governors, the Commissioner of Railways,
+the Inspector-General of the South African Constabulary, two
+official members for each colony, nominated by the Lieutenant-Governors,
+two unofficial members for each colony, elected by the
+unofficial members of the two legislatures, and two members nominated
+by the Secretary of State.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a>
+These figures require a word of explanation. Only 30 millions of the
+loan have been issued, so the charge for interest and management should
+only be £1,208,000; but as the loan year began in May and the financial
+year for the budget began in July, interest and management charges for
+fourteen months were included.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h5>IV.</h5>
+
+<p>It is idle to deny that the present is a period of
+financial strain. The new colonies are solvent, but the
+margin is narrow. Like everything else in South
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+Africa, their finances are on a needle-point, and require
+strenuous intelligence and constant economy. I have
+taken the railway profits and customs receipts as incapable
+of falling below their present level; but it is to
+be remembered that the past year is not a fair basis
+for prophecy, since the country has been in process of
+reconstruction, and the heavy importations for the
+purpose have swollen receipts in both departments.
+If industrial progress is still retarded, both figures will
+sink enormously, and the whole system of finance
+sketched in the preceding pages will require revision.
+If, on the other hand, progress is assured, both figures
+will increase largely, since, while this basis is high as
+compared with the present situation, it is low compared
+with any real prosperity. In this case the
+strain will be of short duration. <i>Ce n&rsquo;est que le
+premier pas qui coûte.</i> Industrial development lies
+at the root of all things. The Transvaal can only
+hope for a large permanent increase of revenue from
+the licences and profit tax paid by the mining industry
+and from Customs receipts drawn from a wider basis
+of population. Unless this increase comes she may be
+unable to meet her own war debt, or to contribute
+anything to an inter-colonial deficit. Inter-colonial
+revenues, too, can only expand from the same cause,
+for mining prosperity is at the bottom of railway
+profits. The State finances depend upon mining
+development, and mining development depends on
+labour: this is the true statement of the problem, and
+all others are involved in a vicious circle. And this is
+as it should be. On the great industry of the country
+the chief burden must lie.</p>
+
+<p>There is, of course, the possibility of windfalls.
+From the Crown share of gold and diamond properties
+very large sums of money may from time to time flow
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+to the Exchequer. But it is the part of a prudent
+finance minister to base his forecasts on the normal
+only, and to accept windfalls as gifts of Providence,
+to be used for special purposes. It may be necessary
+to draw upon this source of income to meet the debt
+charges; but, should this misfortune be spared us, then
+we have in such windfalls the nucleus of a reserve fund
+for development. There is need, as we have seen, of a
+capital outlay on development far beyond that provided
+for in the Guaranteed Loan. Railway extension alone,
+before we have done with it, will need not 5 millions,
+but 10, and, in cases where new lines are built by
+private companies, we shall have to face sooner or later
+a considerable expenditure on expropriation. Public
+works, when all the loan moneys have been spent, will
+still be badly provided for. It may be necessary, too,
+to spend money in expropriating land for public parks,
+for game preserves, for public buildings, for new townships,&mdash;expenditure
+which in the first instance will fall
+upon the Government. So, too, with other schemes,&mdash;irrigation,
+the search for artesian water, the establishment
+of colleges and technical schools, and all the
+thousand activities of government in a new country,
+which will grow quickly and develop early a multitude
+of needs. Lastly, land settlement in the two colonies,
+if it is to serve the social and political purpose which
+is its chief justification, demands more than the 3
+millions allotted to it. Such expenditure is in the
+fullest sense an investment, since the bulk of it will be
+returned in time to the Exchequer with a reasonable
+interest. It is proposed that, in so far as repayments
+of capital from settlers are concerned, such repayments
+should form a special fund, which can go out again
+in fresh advances and further purchases of land. In
+this way a permanent fund for settlement will be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+created, and the project will not be dependent upon
+a share of any annual surplus.</p>
+
+<p>The economic problem of the new colonies finds
+a parallel in Egyptian reconstruction in more ways
+than the analogy of the <i>Caisse de la Dette</i>. There
+is the same undeveloped wealth in the country, the
+same heavy bondage of debt, the same demand for
+reproductive expenditure. To cut down the cost of
+living and the restraints on production, and at the
+same time to provide money for development and for
+the charges of an unproductive debt, is the threefold
+South African problem, as it was the Egyptian.
+Solvency here, as there, is to be found in an equipoise,
+and requires a nice and discriminating statesmanship
+rather than any heroic cutting of knots. In most
+respects the Egyptian difficulty was far the greater,
+for there the cast-iron debt regulations and the
+endless European surveillance frustrated at every
+turn the efforts of her statesmen. But one danger
+was absent. In Egypt patience and diplomacy, faith
+in the country and in the work of time, were so
+obviously the only cards to play, that, while there
+were many temptations to lose heart and abandon
+the struggle, there was no inducement to try short
+cuts and forsake the true path of policy for those
+showy and unconsidered measures which in the rare
+event of their success are called heroic. In South
+Africa the amateur financier is so abroad in the land
+that we may look to find many odd nostrums advocated
+to ensure prosperity. The kind of discussion
+which arose over the labour difficulty is a guide to
+what we may expect in the realm of high finance.
+But in both the one and the other the real problem
+is plain once the obscuration caused by conflicting
+interests is cleared away by a little common-sense.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+The great questions of economics in relation to state
+growth are always simple. If high finance means
+anything it is the power of adding two and two
+together. Complicated financial adjustments belong
+to a lower plane: the great financier may have no
+aptitude in reducing results to a decimal. But there
+is this distinction, that whereas in the intricate
+calculations of secondary finance the figures are mere
+counters, the elaboration of accepted data, in the
+higher and simpler finance they are symbols. To the
+statesman they are the gauge of prosperity or decline,
+and behind them stand the millions of workers, the
+miles of crops, the floods and droughts and pestilences,
+the rise and fall of industries, the ore in the mine, the
+web in the factory, the cattle in the stockyard. The
+yield of a land tax is to him not a figure but a
+symbol, and in using it he has regard not only to
+its formal place in estimates and returns, but to its
+political meaning. It is, if you like, the quality
+which in other spheres constitutes the distinction
+between statesmen and high permanent officials,
+between economists and statisticians, between all
+leaders and all subordinates. In the finance of a
+country which is still in process of reconstruction,
+this power, so uncommon and so inestimable, of
+getting behind figures to facts, and keeping the
+hand on the pulse of national progress, is the only
+guarantee of ultimate success. In this light the
+prospects of the new colonies give good reason for
+hope. The budget of to-day, formally regarded, shows
+a delicate equipoise, in which a pessimist might find
+material for dark forebodings; but it is only the
+symbol of that stress of re-creation which must
+precede an ample prosperity.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XIII.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE SETTLEMENT OF THE LAND.</h4>
+
+<h5>I.</h5>
+
+<p>To the Boer the land was the beginning and end of
+all things: a town was only a necessary excrescence, an
+industry an uitlander whim. A land policy is therefore
+one of the first burdens which attend our heritage.
+Happily we are not seriously impeded by the wreckage
+of systems which have failed. The Boer Government
+had no land legislation, and the few laws, such as the
+Occupation Law of 1886, which touched on the question,
+were less statutory enactments than administrative
+resolutions. The Boer farmer, or his father,
+secured his land when the country was unoccupied,
+and he had merely to arrange the boundary question
+with friendly neighbours. He held it on freehold
+title, with no reservation of quit-rent to the Government.
+When the existing population had thus been
+settled, the balance of unoccupied country fell to the
+State; and this was further parcelled out by grants
+to poor burghers, doles for war service, establishment
+of native reserves, and in the wilder districts by the
+system of occupation tenure. But in spite of all
+grants a considerable portion remained State territory&mdash;over
+44,000 square miles in the Transvaal, of which
+at least 19,000,000 acres are unsurveyed. In the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+Orange River Colony the State lands are smaller, not
+exceeding, with all recent purchases, 1,400,000 acres.
+The land question in the two colonies is therefore of
+the simplest: the best farms, including most of the
+rich pockets of alluvial land, are the freehold possession
+of a small number of Dutch farmers; the balance
+is the more or less encumbered perquisite of the State.</p>
+
+<p>The condition of agriculture in the two colonies was
+primitive in the extreme, a truth quite independent of
+the question whether such elementary methods were
+not the only possible. The first comers were pastoralists
+and nothing more, coming as they did from the
+great pastoral regions in the north of Cape Colony.
+The average farm was laid out for stock, and was
+rarely less than 6000 acres. On the old estimate eight
+acres was required for each head of horned cattle and
+two for each sheep. The Boer was not an advanced
+stock-farmer in any sense of the word. He found
+certain diseases indigenous to the country which he did
+not seriously attempt to cope with. He rarely fenced
+his stock-routes and outspans or endeavoured to improve
+the carrying capacity of the land by paddocking.
+The high veld in winter is burned brown by sun and
+wind and nipped by frosts, so that it gives little
+sustenance to stock; but the rich vegetation in
+summer should have provided, by means of ensilage,
+ample feeding for the winter months. This simple
+device was never used, and when the grass failed
+the Boer trekked with his herds to his low-veld
+farm, whence he frequently brought back the seeds of
+disease in his animals. In the quality of his stock he
+was equally backward. In the Afrikander ox he had
+the makings of one of the hardiest and strongest
+draught animals in the world. In the Afrikander
+pony he had the basis of a wonderful breed of riding-horses,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+to whose merits the late war has sufficiently
+testified. He never seriously tried to improve one or
+the other. Stallions of wretched quality were allowed
+to run wild among his mares, and he had no system
+of culling to raise the quality of his herds. The
+market for his beef and mutton was small and uncritical,
+so that the amassing of animals became with
+him rather the sign visible of prosperity than a serious
+professional enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>At first the Boer did little more than till a garden.
+On each farm there was a certain water-supply, and
+around the spruit or fountain a pocket of alluvial
+land. The ordinary soil, both in the Transvaal and
+the Orange River Colony, is, with some remarkable
+exceptions, poor and easily worked out; but those
+alluvial patches are so rich as to be practically inexhaustible.
+The Boer and the Kaffir shared one
+gift in common, an infallible eye for good country,
+though there was this difference between them that
+the Boer chose the heavy river-side lands, while the
+Kaffir, who was a shallow cultivator, preferred as a
+rule the lighter slopes where he could pick with
+ease. In 1885 the Boer farmer did little more than
+irrigate his garden; but the increase in the population
+of the towns, and the growth of a market for
+cereals, fruits, and vegetables, made him extend his
+irrigation farther, so that in a few years the whole
+of his alluvial pocket was under water. Formerly
+he had been a pure pastoralist; now he became
+also an agriculturist, and after his fashion a narrow-minded
+one, for irrigation, which was his first successful
+experiment, was at once exalted by him into
+an axiomatic law. The Kaffir, who in his way is
+a skilful farmer and an experimentalist on a far
+wider scale, believed in dry lands; but the Boer
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+confined himself to his irrigation and his summer
+and winter crops. Two views have been promulgated
+on the Boer method. One is, that it is the
+true and only type possible in the country, discovered
+after long years of intelligent experience. The Boer,
+it is said, is unprogressive, because he knows the
+limitations under which he works, and all new-comers
+who have begun by trying new methods have sooner
+or later fallen into line with the old inhabitants.
+The supporters of this view point to the scarcity of
+English farmers in the land who have made a success
+of their farms on any other than the Boer methods.
+There seems to be no real justification for this opinion.
+The Boer has no settled principles of farming; he
+is an experimentalist in practice, whatever he may
+be in theory. We have seen that he began as a
+pastoralist, advanced to be also a gardener, and is
+now a cultivator of lands under irrigation. In some
+twenty years, had he been allowed to develop unchecked,
+he would doubtless have come round to the
+Kaffir view of the dry lands. Fifteen years ago the
+country store-keeper stocked only the old single-furrow
+wooden plough: to-day on Boer farms you
+may see double-furrow steel ploughs, disc ploughs,
+disc cultivators, not to speak of such elaborate farm
+machinery as aermotors, reapers and binders, steam
+chaff-cutters, and in some few cases steam-ploughs.
+The more progressive Boers have changed utterly
+their methods of orchard-management, and at the
+present moment they are reconsidering their methods
+of tobacco-growing. The point is important, because
+if the Boer has really found out long ago the limitations
+of the soil and the only principles of farming,
+then so far from deserving the name of unprogressive
+he has shown himself eminently wise. But the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+theory of Boer stability is a chimera. He changes
+every year in his attitude towards the soil,&mdash;changes
+unwillingly, it may be, but certainly; and though
+a few dogmas take a long time to alter, they alter
+in the end. It is equally incorrect to argue from
+the absence of successful immigrant farmers on progressive
+lines. They were few in number, because
+in a country where the rural population was mainly
+hostile, the new-comers who began by farming ended
+as a rule by drifting to the towns. But, to cite
+one case, mealies have been grown on dry lands on
+the American plan with great profit to the farmer;
+and the German tobacco-planters in the north have
+shown how profitable fruit and tobacco growing can
+become, if conducted on principles rather than on
+tradition.</p>
+
+<p>But it is as great a mistake to regard the Boer
+farmer as utterly without capacity. He had no need
+to bestir himself. He lived simply and supplied his
+own modest needs. He saw his farm going up in
+price through the general appreciation of land values,
+and he sold a bit now and again and increased his
+herds; or he might receive a large sum for the option
+on the minerals under the soil. He was cheated by
+the country store-keeper, and he rarely attempted
+to reach distant markets. The old vicious system
+of allowing natives to farm on his land in return
+for a certain amount of compulsory labour&mdash;a system
+unchanged by that abortive piece of law-making, the
+Plakkerswet&mdash;made him unthrifty and improvident.
+He had no labour bill to cast up, no financial position
+which wanted investigation at each year&rsquo;s end. Hence
+the difficulty of framing any accurate forecast of the
+prospects of farming in the new colonies: there are
+no statistics to follow, no scale of values for land
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+or produce. But the Boer had an empirical science
+of his own. He knew exactly the capacity of his
+irrigated land, though he never thought of formulating
+his knowledge. He had many rough and
+effective precautions against blight and disease, and
+he had a kind of gipsy veterinary skill. He was
+not industrious, but I think he must be allowed the
+credit of having done his best for the land on his
+own principles. He was a great buyer of new farm
+machinery, partly perhaps out of curiosity, and on
+this point at least his conservatism was not consistent.
+Some of his methods were based on common rural
+superstitions&mdash;for example, he always sowed, if possible,
+at the full moon. His habit, too, of seeking
+a theological explanation of all misfortunes was
+destructive of energy. When the locusts or the
+<i>galziekte</i> came he lit his pipe and said it was the
+will of God, a visitation which it would be impious
+to resist. Hardly, perhaps, the proper attitude for
+success in this modern world, but under his peculiar
+conditions he never felt its folly. It is impossible to
+believe that the Boer has done justice to the country,
+but we may readily grant him skill and good sense
+in the narrow world in which he dwelt.</p>
+
+<p>The land problem in the new colonies is partly
+political and partly economic, and on the solution
+of the latter branch of the question the former largely
+depends. There are urgent reasons why an English
+population should grow up on the land; but unless
+this population can make a profitable living it would
+be folly to encourage its immigration. On this economic
+question it is impossible to dogmatise. Data, as
+I have said, are lacking and have never existed. At
+the best we can frame some sort of tentative answer&mdash;a
+hope rather than a promise; and we are justified in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+this course because those who attack the policy have
+no better argument to offer.</p>
+
+<p>Before the war the ordinary farmer sold his stock
+and his produce at fair prices in his country town.
+The bulk of it, together with the produce which
+the more enterprising farmers sent direct, went to
+Johannesburg, where on the whole high prices were
+maintained. So good were the prices that the farmers
+of the eastern and western provinces of Cape Colony
+found it profitable, notwithstanding customs and heavy
+railway freights, to make Johannesburg their chief
+market. But in spite of all local production, Johannesburg
+was not fully supplied. Food-stuffs in large
+quantities had to be imported from abroad. In 1898
+agricultural produce, raw and manufactured, to the
+value of nearly £2,500,000 was imported into the
+Transvaal. Arguing on these facts, many have predicted
+a rosy future for all branches of South African
+farming. What has been imported, they say, can be
+grown; the mining industry will advance, and agriculture
+will follow with equal steps. But such rudimentary
+hopes can scarcely be held to exhaust a
+very complicated and delicate problem, to which
+some answer must be suggested before any needs
+of policy can be thought of. There are two questions
+to be met: How far is the land capable of intensive
+and sustained production? and, granting the capacity,
+what guarantee is there of profitable markets?</p>
+
+<p>The soil of the new colonies, as I have said, is
+sharply divided into alluvial pockets and dry lands,&mdash;the
+former highly cultivated, the latter, except for
+Kaffir locations, mainly neglected. But since for one
+alluvial acre there are a hundred dry morgen, the
+progress of the country may be said to depend upon
+the dry lands. It follows that pasturage must remain
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+the staple form of farming. The bulk of the
+dry lands are light and thin in soil, and the natural
+humours of the ground have been much exhausted
+by the unthrifty habit of veld-burning. But in spite
+of all drawbacks it is a country of abundant summer
+grass, both sweet veld and sour veld, which is capable
+of great improvement by any proper system of
+paddocking and depasturing. Large quantities of
+veld grass might be cut for winter fodder, and
+roots and forage crops could be grown in summer
+for the same purpose. Farms, which at present carry
+an ox to every eight acres and a sheep to every two,
+might be made capable of supporting a vastly greater
+stock. But there are certain drawbacks to stock-farming
+peculiar to the country, the chief being the
+number of diseases indigenous and imported. At
+the present moment to bring in valuable stock to
+most districts of the new colonies is a dangerous experiment.
+Horses die of horse-sickness, sheep of scab
+and anthrax, cattle of rinderpest, red-water, and the
+immense variety of <i>ziektes</i> from <i>galziekte</i> to <i>gielziekte</i>.
+Before the new colonies can advance to the rank of
+great pastoral lands which is their right, vigorous
+methods must be taken to stamp out diseases wherever
+they appear, and to take precautions against
+their recurrence. The country must be fenced, stock-routes
+and outspans must be established and guarded,
+and a stringent Brands Act must be passed to give
+security to the stock-owner in a country where stock
+is notoriously prone to vanish.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
+Given good laws, adequately administered, the
+Transvaal and the Orange River Colony may well
+become countries of large and prosperous stock-farms.
+Here, it has been argued, the matter ends. Agriculture
+must confine itself in most cases to the growth
+of domestic supplies and winter forage. I cannot, after
+a careful examination of most parts of the country,
+bring myself to accept this view. Much may be done
+by irrigation to increase the area of land under water.
+Sir W. Willcocks&rsquo; Report<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> proposes to give to South
+Africa 3,000,000 acres of perennially irrigated land
+at a cost of about £30,000,000; but as he argues for
+the undertaking on the basis of certain doubtful land
+valuations, this large estimate may have to be considerably
+modified. Unirrigated land, he says, varies
+from 2s. 6d. to £3 per acre: irrigation costs from
+£7, 10s. to £15 per acre; and the price of good irrigated
+land runs from £20 to £100. On this reasoning
+there is room for a handsome profit, but the argument
+is based rather on fictitious market values than on the
+intrinsic normal producing power of the soil. At the
+time when Sir W. Willcocks&rsquo; Report was written&mdash;the
+last year of the war&mdash;land values were inflated, and
+the prices of produce grown under water were extremely
+high. In the average year for which we must
+provide little irrigated land will be worth to the
+farmer more than from £5 to £10 per acre, and
+certain irrigation schemes which, on Sir W. Willcocks&rsquo;
+showing would return a profit, would in reality spell
+ruin to their promoters. Irrigation is necessary on a
+certain scale for a reason which we shall discuss later;
+and in many cases it could be effected at a moderate
+cost. But expensive irrigation works for agriculture
+alone are, I believe, of doubtful wisdom in almost every
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+part of the country. What is of infinitely greater importance
+is the procuring of water in the dry tracts
+by tanks, wells, and, if possible, by artesian bores.
+Vast stock districts in Waterberg and Lichtenburg
+would have their value quadrupled if a permanent
+supply of water, even for stock purposes only, could
+be procured. The Australian method of tank-sinking
+has already been followed with success in the Springbok
+Flats, and it is at least possible that artesian
+water may be found. Everywhere the soil contains
+water at a low depth, which percolates through the
+porous rock, and is brought to a stand by dykes of
+harder stone. Hence has arisen the old African fiction
+of underground rivers, which is true to the extent that
+no man has far to dig before he finds water. It is
+rather with such tank- and well-sinking that a water
+expert should deal, and with the regulation of the
+present ridiculous apportionment of water rights. No
+serious work can be done in this department till the
+State assumes the right of distributing water, and has
+it in its power to prevent the riparian owner from
+following an obstructive course to the detriment of
+his neighbours. Irrigation in a few cases should be
+followed, and a greater portion of land brought under
+water in the interests of mixed farming; but it is in
+another direction that we must look for the sheet-anchor
+of South African agriculture.</p>
+
+<p>The rainfall of the new colonies is generally well
+distributed. Copious rains fall from September to
+April, and then come the four dry and windy months
+of winter. On irrigated lands summer and winter
+crops are grown; on dry lands a summer crop only.
+But the Boer believed that the crops which he could
+grow on dry lands were very limited, and he habitually
+grew mealies, potatoes, lucerne, and tobacco under
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+water. It is, of course, a great advantage to reap two
+crops a-year; but if a man can get two crops from
+5 acres only and one crop from 500, this one crop, on
+ordinary principles of common-sense, should command
+his chief attention. Deducting the greater expense
+for labour, the one crop is still thirty or forty times as
+important as the other two. This is roughly the agricultural
+problem of the dry lands. They have never
+been really exploited. The Kaffir has picked at the
+edges; a few progressive farmers have made good
+profits by growing mealies and tobacco dry on the
+American plan. But it was much easier to potter
+about with a water-furrow than to attempt to plough
+the dry and unbroken flats. Dry-land farming is
+therefore pioneer farming, and pioneering with a good
+hope of success. Granted the markets, there is no
+reason why great tracts should not be ploughed from
+end to end, and a huge crop of cereals and roots raised
+yearly. Steam-ploughing and every labour-saving
+device will be necessary, for this is farming on the
+grand scale. The outlook is made brighter when we
+realise that those despised dry lands are some of the
+richest in the country. The famous Standerton black
+soil, the environs of Middelburg, part of the Bloemhof
+and Klerksdorp districts, and, above all, the Springbok
+Flats,<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> where there may be half a million acres
+of the richest black soil 12 feet deep, and another half
+million acres of excellent red soil&mdash;such are a few
+instances of lands which await an early development.</p>
+
+<p>There is still another aspect of this problem which
+concerns a small group of semi-tropical products&mdash;fruits,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
+tobacco, rubber, coffee, and, possibly, cocoa.
+There are tracts which have proved themselves to be
+as highly fitted for such crops as any in the world.
+They are crops, too, for which the acreage required is
+small, and whose value is so high in proportion to bulk
+that the freightage does not seriously detract from
+profits. Given, again, the market, and there is no
+reason why the present yield should not be centupled.</p>
+
+<p>The market&mdash;that is the rock on which arguments
+divide. The rosy hopes of the market to be furnished
+by the Transvaal which some minds entertained during
+the war have given place with many to an equally
+fantastic pessimism. I do not propose to provide
+a tabulated statement of costs and prices. I have
+seen such statements arrive by the clearest reasoning
+at opposite conclusions. But it is worth while to
+consider soberly what are the market prospects in the
+future for the farmer of the new colonies. A comparison
+of imports gives little assistance. In the year
+1902 the raw agricultural produce imported into the
+Transvaal, all of which might be locally produced,
+was worth over 2 millions sterling; and the imports
+of manufactured and partially manufactured produce,
+the bulk of which might be produced and manufactured
+locally, came close on another million. These
+figures may be taken as below normal, since supplies
+for the army of occupation are not included, and at
+the same time the number of inhabitants in the towns
+and natives in the mines were largely below the ordinary
+figures. On the other hand, little agriculture
+existed, and practically all supplies for the existing
+population, such as it was, had to be brought from
+the adjoining colonies or from over-seas. On this
+basis, therefore, there is a considerable and highly
+profitable market for the limited agriculture and pastoral
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+enterprise of the country. But in framing any
+forecast two new factors must be taken into consideration.
+If the towns are to develop, the cost of living
+must be greatly reduced; which means in the first instance
+that all ordinary food-stuffs must be imported
+free of duty and at cheap railway rates. Again,
+when all the Boer farmers have been resettled on
+their lands and a multitude of new-comers occupy
+Crown farms, the local agricultural output will be
+very largely increased. The farmer, who at the
+moment can sell his garden stuff, his crops of potatoes,
+mealies, and forage, and his stock at a good
+profit, will find himself faced by over-sea produce,
+grown wholesale under the most favourable conditions,
+and sold at a price with which he cannot compete
+and live. This is, I think, a true forecast&mdash;for the
+small improvident farmer. The man who grows mealies
+on a large scale with labour-saving appliances, or who
+has a well-managed stock-ranch, will make a profit on
+wholesale dealings. In agriculture and pasturage,
+as in other activities, Providence is on the side of the
+bigger battalions, and the small man who grows on
+an expensive scale will be pushed out by the large
+man who grows economically. Prophecy is an intricate
+task, especially on land questions, but it seems clear
+that the only class who will not have to dread to
+some extent a change in present conditions, a cheapening
+of the means of life, and the influx of a large
+agricultural population, will be the wholesale farmers
+and pastoralists, who follow the methods of over-sea
+producers and enjoy the advantage of living at their
+customers&rsquo; doors.</p>
+
+<p>But this does not exhaust the question. Is, then,
+the small holder of 100 or 200 acres, or the owner of
+a mixed farm of 1000 acres, to become extinct in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+land? It depends entirely on themselves. In districts
+such as Waterberg, Zoutpansberg, and Barberton,
+the holder of 50 acres under water will be able to put
+vegetables and fruit on the Rand market a fortnight
+before any other grower in the world. His price is
+assured beyond doubt; and if he may find little profit
+for six months in the year, he is in no worse case than
+many prosperous market-gardeners in Kent and Surrey.
+It is here that the value of irrigation appears. Such a
+small holder, again, may be able to make a profit from
+dairying all the year round, provided local creameries
+are established, and he goes the proper way about it.
+So, too, with mixed farming, of which the essence is
+that one product can be set off against another. If
+a farmer finds cereals unproductive, he can put part
+of his land into pasture; it is unlikely that the price
+of meat will fall below a paying point, granted the
+expected industrial development. In addition there
+are certain crops, such as tobacco, where the profits,
+even allowing for a large decline in present prices, are
+great, the freightage small, and the market worldwide.
+The aim of mixed farming is to provide an
+elaborate system of alternate schemes, which between
+them will preserve a fairly permanent average of
+profit.</p>
+
+<p>The basis of all farming prosperity is the growth of
+the mining industry and the creation of new industries.
+Any attempt to protect farming by tolls or imposts
+is foredoomed to a miserable failure. Sink, if
+necessary, farming considerations altogether for the
+moment; look only to mining development, if need
+be; abolish the old market prices and ruin the old
+local producer: it is all good policy, and in the long-run
+the true agricultural interest. When the present
+fictitious basis is got rid of, the true and lasting
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+agricultural prosperity may begin. There seems no
+reason to doubt that in the future there will be a
+sound local market for the large producer, for the
+favourably situated small holder, and for the judicious
+farmer of mixed land. Nor is there any reason why
+in time a considerable export trade should not be
+established. As the great produce-exporting countries
+of the world grow more populous, South Africa may
+yet play its part in feeding Europe. With improved
+internal communications, and thousands of miles of
+fine pasture land, there is no reason why, a fortnight
+nearer Europe than Australia, she should not take her
+share of the frozen-meat traffic of the world. In
+tobacco, again, to take only one instance, a very considerable
+export trade may arise. The soil is well
+suited; the rough leaf, grown on the most unscientific
+method, is as good as anything produced by Virginia
+and Borneo. The large tobacco-growers, or the small
+holders attached to a tobacco-factory, may very well
+find a profitable outlet for their wares abroad, and
+the English manufacturers discover a new producing
+ground in a British colony with which to resist the
+attacks of transatlantic combines.</p>
+
+<p>The farming prospects in the new colonies, even if
+stripped of all fanciful stuff, are sound and hopeful.
+There may come bad times for all. The ordinary
+market-gardener will for a certainty find himself
+poorly off five years hence; and all classes may have
+their periods of stress and despair. Such visitations
+are part of the primeval curse upon tillers of the soil.
+The New Zealand and Australian pastoralists had
+sunk very low before the discovery of cold storage
+saved the situation. The Ceylon planters, after the
+coffee blight, seemed on the brink of ruin, when the
+introduction of tea-growing more than restored their
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+former prosperity. An immunity from farming risks
+can no more be guaranteed in the new colonies than
+in other countries. The real question is, Can they
+offer the settler no greater risks than he has to face
+elsewhere, and at least a fair chance of greater prosperity?
+On a reasonable survey of the case, I think
+it will be found that they can.</p>
+
+<p>With this clearing of the ground we can turn with
+an open mind to the political question. The secular
+antithesis of town and country is as marked here as
+elsewhere, and the political problem varies accordingly.
+In the country we have to create in a large measure
+from the foundation; we have to meet and nullify the
+prevailing apathy, and undertake as a Government
+many tasks which would elsewhere be left to private
+enterprise. There the wounds of war gape more
+widely, and have to be healed by more cunning
+simples. People have spoken as if the towns were
+the sole factor in the case. Make the towns prosperous
+and wholly British, it has been said, and the
+land is ours. The towns are the loyal units; as they
+advance in prosperity the rural districts will sink out
+of account; and rightly, for their wealth is small,
+their population hostile, and their future barren.
+&ldquo;Twenty years hence,&rdquo; wrote in 1896 an observer
+as clear-sighted as he was hopeful, &ldquo;the white population
+is likely to be composed in about equal proportions
+of urban and rural elements. The urban element
+will be mainly mining, gathered at one great centre
+on the Witwatersrand, and possibly at some smaller
+centres in other districts. The rural element, consisting
+of people who live in villages or solitary farmhouses,
+will remain comparatively backward, because
+little affected by the social forces which work swiftly
+and potently upon close-packed industrial communities,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+and it may find itself very different in tone,
+temper, and tendencies from its urban fellow-citizens.&rdquo;<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>
+So we find one class of mine-owners arguing that any
+attempt to settle the country districts is a work of
+supererogation, and urging the Government to concentrate
+all its efforts on the promotion of their own
+industry, declaring that from their prosperity every
+blessing will flow forth to the rural parts. It is
+impossible to contemplate with equanimity the result
+of merely letting things alone. No industrial development
+would ever compensate for it, for the unleavened
+Dutch rural districts would become centres to collect
+and focus and stereotype the old unfaltering dislike.
+A hard-and-fast division between town and country
+is always to be feared; but when the barrier is
+between white men, and is built up of race, wealth,
+and civilisation, it can only be a dire calamity. We
+cannot rear up for our children a race of helots, and
+by our very exclusiveness solidify for all time an
+irreconcilable race division. If we preserve such an
+enemy within our bounds, and just beyond our gates,
+the time may come when a few isolated townships
+will represent Britain in South Africa. To prevent
+this cleavage, urban and rural development should
+advance with equal steps. The two races will be
+joined not by any trivial sentimental devices, but by
+the partnership of Dutch and British farmers in the
+enlightened development of the land.</p>
+
+<p>There is another and a profounder reason for this
+introduction of British blood. The day may come
+when the South African, splendid as has been his
+loyalty and many his sacrifices, may go the way of
+most colonists, and lose something of that close touch
+with the mother-country which is necessary in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+interests of a federated empire. It is always the
+temptation of town-dwellers, with their busy life and
+their own engrossing interests, and the tremendous
+mixture of alien blood in the country may serve to
+hasten this result beyond the ordinary rate of colonial
+progress. But the country settler is a different
+person. He retains a longer and simpler affection
+for the country of his birth. An influx of such a class
+would consolidate South African sentiment, and, when
+self-government comes, protect imperial interests
+better than any constitutional guarantee. This is
+the class which has the true stake in the country,
+deriving its life from the nurture of the earth, striving
+with winds and weather, and slowly absorbing into
+the fibre of its being those influences which make for
+race and patriotism.</p>
+
+<p>South African agriculture, as the shrewdest
+observers have long foreseen, could never be improved
+until there arose a political reason for its
+improvement. The reason for the experiment has
+arrived, and its basis is in existence. In the inheritance
+of Crown lands which remains from the mismanaged
+estate of the late Government, and in the
+long lists of ex-irregulars and others who sought land,
+there was the raw material of settlement. It is no
+case for flamboyant prophecies. The certain difficulties
+are as great as the probable advantages. But
+to shrink from those difficulties is to have towns
+where British ideas of government, can be realised
+and outside vast rural districts, suspicious, unfriendly,
+potentially dangerous; to neglect a golden opportunity
+of increasing the British element in South
+Africa; and to turn the back upon farming, which
+must always be the most permanent asset of any
+nation. The determinant fact in the case is that the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+alternative is so black that all risks must be faced
+rather than accept it. With such considerations in
+mind, the Government put forth a scheme of settlement,
+with the examination of which the remainder
+of this chapter is concerned. It is not my business to
+write the history of the Crown Colony administration,
+and therefore no time need be given to the many
+difficulties which faced the scheme, the mistakes
+made, and the hopeful results attained in certain
+cases. It is the problem itself which demands attention,
+and the adequacy or inadequacy of the policy
+which has been framed to meet it. Land settlement
+is from its very nature a slow business, with
+tardy fruits: twenty years hence we may be in a
+position to judge by results. But in the meantime
+it is possible, when the data are known, to ascertain
+whether a policy is on <i>a priori</i> grounds adapted to
+meet them.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a>
+A Fencing Act, a Stock-Route Act, and a Brands Act on the most
+progressive lines have been prepared for the Transvaal. An excellent
+Fencing Act, badly administered, has always existed in the Orange River
+Colony, and a Brands Act, inferior to the Transvaal measure, has been
+passed in that colony. But it is the effective administration of the Acts
+which is of importance.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a>
+Parliamentary Paper C.D. 1163.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a>
+My friend, Colonel Owen Thomas, had some samples of Transvaal
+soil analysed, and the report was very discouraging. To set against this,
+a sample of Springbok Flats soil was pronounced by a distinguished
+English expert, to whom it was sent, to be one of the richest specimens of
+virgin soil he had seen.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a>
+Bryce, Impressions of South Africa, 3rd edition, p. 451.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h5>II.</h5>
+
+<p>The Crown lands of the Transvaal, as I have said,
+amount to upwards of 29 million acres, the Crown
+lands of the Orange River Colony to under 1&frac12; million.
+So far as the latter colony is concerned, land settlement
+is rather in the nature of estate management.
+The lands are too small for any serious political purpose,
+nor would the most extended settlement make
+much impression upon the solid Dutch rural community.
+But in the Transvaal the Crown in several
+districts is by far the largest landowner, and in others
+it holds the key of the position. Take a Transvaal
+map coloured according to ownership, and red is easily
+the master colour. A solid block of it occupies the
+north-east corner; large islands of it appear in the
+western and eastern borders; and the centre is plentifully
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+dotted. Save in the little known north-east
+those lands are generally pasture, and in too many
+cases dry and arid bush-veld. In the Standerton
+district, and in parts of Rustenburg, Potchefstroom,
+and Bloemhof, there are tracts of good irrigated or
+irrigable lands; while in Barberton, Lydenburg, Zoutpansberg,
+and Marico there are considerable districts
+well watered and well suited for tropical and sub-tropical
+products. Taken as a whole, however, only
+a small portion of the Crown holding is suitable for
+early settlement&mdash;say 2&frac12; million acres within the
+next three years. But there is a wide hinterland for
+development, and in settlement, as in empire, a hinterland
+is a moral necessity. There must be an open
+country to which the sons of farmers, in whom the
+love of the life is born, can trek as pioneers, otherwise
+there is a futile division into smaller holdings, or a
+more futile exodus to the towns. Besides, there
+should be room for the townsman&mdash;the miner, the
+artisan, the trader&mdash;to feel that there is somewhere
+an open country where he can invest his savings if he
+has a mind for a simpler life. As railways spread out
+into new districts, land will become agricultural which
+is now pasture; and, as the pastoral industry develops
+and herds are formed and diseases are mastered, the
+ranchman will occupy large tracts of what is now the
+unused hunting-veld.</p>
+
+<p>The Government scheme aims at making a beginning
+with this settlement&mdash;a beginning only, for no
+government has ever been able to reconstruct alone, and
+the bulk of the work must be done by private enterprise.
+If 2000 farmers from England and the colonies
+can be settled in the rural parts before the day of
+stress arrives, then the work has been fairly started.
+A nucleus will have been formed to which the years
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
+will add, an element which will both leaven the slow
+and suspicious rustic society and provide a make-weight
+against the parochialism of the great towns.
+A country party is wanted which can look beyond
+the dorp and the mine-head, and view South African
+interests broadly and soberly. Such a party must be
+common to both town and country, but it cannot be
+built up wholly from either. It must, in the first
+instance, be a British party; but if this British party
+is to become a South African party, it must stand for
+interests common to both races and to all classes.
+The formation of this leavening element cannot be
+left to time and chance, but must be aided by conscious
+effort. The land is largely unproved, and full
+of dangers to crops and stock. The new-comer must
+therefore be treated gently, and helped over the
+many stiles which confront him. He will usually be
+a man of small means, and his limited capital must
+be put to the best use, and eked out with judicious
+Government advances. He should have few payments
+to make during his early years, when payments will
+necessarily come out of capital. Above all, the
+acquirement of the full freehold in his land on reasonable
+terms, and within a reasonable time, should be
+kept constantly before him as an encouragement to
+thrift and industry, for the sense of freehold, as the
+voortrekkers used to say, &ldquo;turns sand into gold.&rdquo;
+Much of the Crown lands will never be suitable for
+any but the largest stockholders. These it is easy to
+deal with as a mere matter of estate-management;
+but the political purport of the scheme is concerned
+with intensive settlement, with the small holder and
+the mixed farmer of moderate means, who can provide
+a solid colony of mutually supporting and progressive
+Englishmen.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+The Transvaal &ldquo;Settlers&rsquo; Ordinance&rdquo; of 1902 is
+based upon the mass of legislation which embodies the
+settlement schemes of the Australasian colonies. The
+usual method in such experiments has been to begin
+in desperate fear of the settler, tying him up with
+cast-iron rules, and ruining him in a very few years.
+Then the pendulum swings back, and settlement is
+made easy and profitable, the old safeguards are
+abolished, and the land becomes full of rich squatters
+and companies, who fatten on State munificence
+through the numerous dummy settlers in their pay.
+Finally, after long years a compromise is effected, and
+that shy creature, the <i>bonâ-fide</i> settler, is sought for
+far and near. By this time it is probable that the
+thing has got a bad name, and men whose fathers and
+grandfathers lost money under former schemes, are
+chary of trusting themselves again to the tender
+mercies of a land-owning State. This, or something
+like it, has been the experience of the Australasian
+colonies. Either land was given out indiscriminately
+and a valuable State asset cheaply parted with, or the
+conditions of tenure were such as to ruin the small
+holder and put everything in the hands of a few rich
+syndicates. The land laws of Australia and New
+Zealand form, therefore, a most valuable precedent.
+We have their experiments before our eyes, and can
+learn from their often disastrous experience.</p>
+
+<p>Settlement in New South Wales, to take one instance,
+was begun partly as a Treasury expedient
+and partly as an election cry. Under the Act of 1867
+a settler was allowed to peg off, as on a mining area,
+a claim not exceeding 320 acres, without any attempt
+at a previous valuation and survey. The result was a
+wild rush, where nobody benefited except the blackmailer,
+who seized the strategic points of the country,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
+such as water-holes, and had to be bought out at a
+fancy price. It does not surprise one to learn that of
+settlers under this scheme not one in twenty remains
+to-day. By subsequent Acts the maximum acreage
+was increased; but in any case it was an arbitrary
+figure, and it was not till 1895 that it was left within
+the widest limits to the discretion of the Minister
+of Lands. Areas proved too small, since no provision
+could be made for the increase of stock and the necessary
+fall in prices which attended settlement. In
+valuation the extraordinary plan was adopted of giving
+a uniform capital value of £1 per acre to all land.
+The country being unproved, values were absolutely
+unknown, nor was any provision made for revaluation.
+The result was that the settler struggled along till he
+was ruined and his holding forfeited, when the holding
+lapsed to the State, which, being unable to find a new
+tenant, was compelled to let it remain vacant, having
+accomplished nothing but the needless ruin of the
+first man. The &ldquo;Settlers&rsquo; Ordinance&rdquo; has endeavoured
+to avoid laying down any rules which experience
+has not tried and tested. The determination of the
+size of any holding is left to the land officials, without
+defining any area limits. A holding which proves too
+small may be increased on appeal, and the boundaries
+are at all times made capable of adjustment. Holdings
+are first surveyed and valued, then gazetted for application,
+and finally publicly allotted, after full inquiry
+into the case of each applicant, by a Central Board.
+The division and valuation of farms, in the absence of
+reliable data, is a work of great nicety and difficulty.
+The country contains within its limits many districts
+which differ widely in soil, vegetation, and climate.
+It is therefore impossible, in deciding on the size of
+holdings, to follow any arbitrary rule; and to restrict
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+survey to a maximum and minimum acreage would be
+fatal. The only method is to ascertain from local
+evidence the carrying and producing capacity of similar
+land, and so frame the boundaries of a farm as to
+provide on such figures a reasonably good living for
+the class of settler for whom it is intended. The
+danger of putting too high a price on land is not less
+great. If the current market price is taken it will in
+most instances be overvalued, and in any case it is a
+method without any justification in reason. The best
+solution is probably the plan at present in use.
+Schedules have been prepared for the different types
+of holding, in which the profits are calculated, using as
+a guide the present price of stock and imported produce
+at the coast to ensure against the inevitable fall
+in prices. Taking such estimated profits as a basis,
+the valuation is so fixed as to give the settler, after
+all living expenses, annual payments to Government,
+probable loss of stock, and depreciation of plant have
+been written off, a clear profit of 12 per cent on his
+original capital. From this figure some further deductions
+may fall to be made for such disadvantages as
+unhealthiness of climate and excessive distance from
+the conveniences of civilised life. In the absence of
+more scientific data this seems to form as fair a basis
+in valuation as any man can expect.</p>
+
+<p>But if early Australasian legislation erred in rigour,
+it also erred in laxity. The settler was often the
+nominee of a syndicate or a large run-holder, and
+before the 1895 Act a class of professional selectors
+existed. This system of <i>latifundia</i> brought its own
+punishment. The run-holder ruined the small selector.
+To pay the instalments on his many selections he had
+recourse to the banks, which speedily ruined him and
+took over his holdings. The banks in their turn
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+ruined themselves, chiefly through being obliged to
+pay instalments on land valued at £1 per acre, of which
+the actual value for stock was less than 5s. Again,
+the settler was compelled to improve the land at the
+rate of so many shillings per acre within a given time.
+This led to cheap fictitious improvements by which the
+letter of the law was satisfied and the spirit evaded.
+The &ldquo;Settlers&rsquo; Ordinance&rdquo; has certain stringent provisions
+to prevent such frustration of the true aims of
+settlement. Subletting or transfer of any sort, except
+with Government consent, is strictly forbidden till the
+tenant has acquired the freehold. Residence for at
+least eight months in the year, unless a special dispensation
+is granted, is required during the same
+period. The settler is compelled to build a satisfactory
+house and to fence his holding within a given time.
+He is compelled to occupy it solely for his own benefit,
+to cultivate according to the rules of good husbandry
+(whatever that may mean), and the decision of the
+local Land Commissioner is the test by which he is
+judged. He is encouraged to improve by the potent
+fact that the Government will advance pound for
+pound against his improvements. But there are
+certain elastic provisions to temper the rigour of such
+restrictions. The Commissioner of Lands is given a
+very wide dispensing power with regard to most conditions.
+Partnerships are allowed; settlers may reside
+together in a village community; and the residence
+conditions may be temporarily fulfilled by a wife or
+child, to allow a settler in hard times to make money
+by his labour elsewhere. Special relief is provided
+during periods of disease or drought by the cessation
+or diminution of the annual payments, and by advances
+in excess of the ordinary limits.</p>
+
+<p>The Ordinance has been framed on experimental
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+lines, leaving much to the discretion of local officials
+(subject to an appeal to the Central Board and thence
+to the High Court), and hesitating to dogmatise on
+details which are still unproved. But in spite of
+much which is empirical, one or two root principles
+are maintained. One is that a fair chance must be
+given to all to acquire the freehold, without which
+magic possibility the best men will not come forward.
+Another, and perhaps the most important of all, is
+that the payments to Government shall be so arranged
+as to be scarcely felt during the early years when
+they are paid out of capital, and to rise to any considerable
+sum only when the holding is producing a
+revenue. The two chief forms of tenure are leasehold
+and purchase by instalments over a period of thirty
+years. The common form of lease is for five years,
+with a possible extension for another two, and the
+rental may be at any rate (not exceeding 5 per cent)
+which the Commissioner of Lands thinks suitable.
+This method will enable back-country to be taken
+up, to start with, at a nominal rent; and it will
+also allow a settler on an unimproved stock-farm to
+devote the bulk of his capital to the necessary
+stocking and improvements. At the end of the lease,
+or without any preliminary lease, the settler can
+begin to purchase his holding on the instalments
+system. By a payment of £5, 15s. per cent per
+annum on the gazetted valuation, principal and
+interest (which is calculated at 4 per cent) will be
+wiped off in thirty years. But a settler is permitted
+any time after ten years from the date of his first
+occupation to pay up the balance and acquire the
+full freehold. In the case of preliminary leaseholders
+who take up a purchase licence, the licence, so far
+as the ten years&rsquo; period is concerned, is made retrospective
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+so as to date from the first day of
+the lease.</p>
+
+<p>Such is a rough outline of the Government proposals.
+They aim only at making a beginning, and
+it is to the large private owner and the land company
+that we must look for the completion of the work.
+South African agriculture can never be a Golconda
+like the Canadian wheat-lands of the West. But it
+is of inestimable value to the country in providing a
+background to the immense temporary mining development&mdash;a
+permanent asset, which will remain to South
+Africa&rsquo;s credit when the gold-mines of the Rand are
+curiosities of history. In itself it is a sound investment,
+offering no glittering fortunes but a steady
+and reasonable livelihood. No people can afford to
+develop solely on industrial lines and remain a nation
+in the full sense of the word, for in every commonwealth
+there is need of the rural forces of persistence
+to counteract the urban forces of change. All settlement
+is necessarily a leap in the dark, but, so far
+as a proposal can be judged before it is put into
+practice, the present scheme offers good chances of
+success. There seems little doubt that it will receive
+full justice. The war spread the knowledge of the
+country to every cranny of the Empire. English and
+Scottish farmers&rsquo; sons, Australian bushmen, Indian
+planters, farmers from New Zealand and Ontario,
+having fought for three years on the veld, have
+fallen in love with it and are willing to make it their
+home. No more splendid chances for settlement have
+ever offered; for when the wastrels have been eliminated
+there remain many thousands of good men,
+from whom a sturdy country stock could be created.
+There can be no indiscriminate gifts of land as in
+some colonies. The land is too valuable, the political
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+purpose too delicate and urgent, the need of nice
+discrimination in selection and careful fostering thereafter
+too imperative, to allow farms to be shaken up
+in a lucky-bag and distributed to the first comers.
+The best men must be attracted, and assisted with
+advice and loans to the measure of success which is
+possible. It is the soundest form of political speculation,
+if done with sober and clear-sighted purpose.
+The young men from home and the colonies, to whom
+South Africa is a memory that can never die, turn
+naturally towards it in search of a freer life and a
+larger prospect. On the model farms which are being
+established in each district the proverbial &ldquo;younger
+sons of younger sons&rdquo; will be given a chance of learning
+the requirements of the land, and so starting
+work on their own account with intelligence and
+economy. Some day&mdash;and may we all live to see
+it!&mdash;there will be little white homesteads among trees,
+and country villages and moorland farms; cattle and
+sheep on a thousand hills where now only the wild
+birds cry; wayside inns where the thirsty traveller
+can find refreshment; and country shows where John
+Smith and Johannes Smuts will compete amicably for
+the King&rsquo;s premiums. And if any one thinks this
+an unfounded hope, let him turn to some such book
+as Ogilby&rsquo;s &lsquo;Itinerarium Angliæ,&rsquo; where he will find
+that in the closing years of the seventeenth century
+the arable and pastoral land in England scarcely
+amounted to half the area of the kingdom, and the
+most fruitful orchards of Gloucestershire and Warwick
+were mere heath and swamp, and, as it seemed to
+an acute observer, doomed to remain so.</p>
+
+<p>Settlement, indeed, is but one, though the most
+important, of the land problems. An enlightened
+agricultural department, working in conjunction with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
+local societies, can do much to unite the two races
+by conferring benefits which are common to both.
+The introduction of pedigree stock to grade up the
+existing herds is a necessity which any Boer farmer
+will admit. So, too, are stringent regulations for the
+prevention of disease, experiments in new crops, field
+trials of new machinery, and a provision for some form
+of agricultural training. Central creameries and
+tobacco-factories would work wonders in increasing
+the prosperity of certain districts. Something of that
+tireless vigilance and alert intelligence which has
+made the Agricultural Bureau of the United States
+famous, a spirit which brings into agriculture the
+procedure and the exact calculation of a great
+business house, is necessary to meet the not insuperable
+difficulties which now deter the timid, and
+to give farming a chance of development commensurate
+with its political importance. It is only
+another case in which a South African question
+stands on a razor-edge, a narrow line separating
+ample success from a melancholy failure.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XIV.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE SUBJECT RACES.</h4>
+
+<p>No question is more fraught with difficulties for the
+home philosopher than this, but there is none on
+which practical men have made up their mind with
+such bitter completeness. The root of the trouble is
+that England and South Africa talk, and will continue
+to talk, in different languages on the matter. The
+Englishman, using the speech of conventional politics,
+seems to the colonist to talk academic nonsense; while
+the South African, speaking the rough and ready
+words of the practical man, appears as the champion
+of brutality and coercion. The difficulties are so
+real that one cannot but regret that they are complicated
+by verbal misunderstandings. There is no
+real divergence of views on the native question: the
+distinction is rather between a seriously held opinion
+and a slipshod prejudice. &ldquo;Exeter Hall&rdquo; is less
+the name of a party than of an attitude, as common
+among the robust colonists as ever it was among the
+mild pietists of Clapham. It consists in a disinclination
+to look simply on facts, to reason soberly, and to
+speak accurately,&mdash;a tendency to lap a question in
+turgid emotion. The man who consigns all native
+races to perdition in round terms, and declares that the
+only solution of the difficulty is to clear out the Kaffir,
+is as truly a votary of Exeter Hall as the gentle old
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+lady to whom the aborigine is a model of primeval
+innocence, whose only joy is the singing of missionary
+hymns.</p>
+
+<p>Out of the confusion of interests and issues two
+main problems emerge which may form useful guides
+in our inquiry. One is economic. What part are the
+native races to play in the labour-supply and the production
+of South Africa? what is to be their tenure of
+land? what is to be their economic destiny in face of
+the competition of modern life and the industrial
+development of the country? The second is the moral
+question, of which the political is one aspect. A
+coloured race living side by side with a white people
+furnishes one of the gravest of moral cruces. The
+existence of a subject race on whatever terms is apt to
+lead to the deterioration in moral and mental vigour
+of its masters. Perpetual tutelage tends to this
+result; full social and civic rights, on the other hand,
+lead to political anomalies and, too often, to the lowest
+forms of political chicanery. A doctrinaire idealism is
+fraught with dire social evils; but an obstinate maintenance
+of the &ldquo;practical man&rsquo;s&rdquo; <i>status quo</i> is apt to
+bring about that very degeneration which justifies the
+doctrinaire. How to reconcile freedom of development
+for the native by means of spontaneous labour, education,
+and social rights with the degree of compulsion
+necessary to bring them into line with social and
+industrial needs, or, to put it shortly, how to keep the
+white man from deterioration without spoiling the
+Kaffir,&mdash;this is the kernel of the most insistent of
+South African problems.</p>
+
+<p>The native races south of the Zambesi present a
+curious problem to the student of primitive societies.
+All, or nearly all, of kindred race, they are not autochthonous,
+and the date of their arrival in the country
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+can in most cases be fixed within the last five
+centuries. Five centuries do not give a long title
+to a country, as savage titles go, but even this period
+must be cut down in most cases, since the wars
+of the great Zulu kings scattered the other races
+about as from a pepper-box, with the result that
+few tribes save the Zulus, some of the Cape Colony
+Kaffirs, the Swazis, and small peoples like the Barolongs,
+can claim an occupation title of more than a
+hundred years. This state of affairs, so rare in our
+dealings with savage peoples, has, politically, both
+merits and defects. The absence of the autochthonous
+hold of the soil and of long-settled immovable traditions
+of tribal life makes the native more malleable
+under the forces of civilisation. It is easier to break
+up the tribes and to acclimatise the Kaffir to new
+localities and new conditions. But this lack of a
+strong, settled, racial life makes it fatally easy for him
+to fall a victim to the vices of civilisation, and to come
+upon our hands as a derelict creature without faith or
+stamina, having lost his old taboos, and being as yet
+unable to understand the laws of the white man.
+This process of disintegration has been going on for a
+century, and the result is a clearly marked division.
+We have the tribal natives, who are still more or less
+strictly under the rule of a chief, and subject to tribal
+laws sanctioned and enforced by the Governments.
+The native population of the Transkeian territories in
+Cape Colony, such as the Pondos, the Amaxosas, and
+the Tembus; Bechuanaland, with the people of
+Khama, Bathoen, Sebele, and Linchwe; Basutoland;
+Zululand; the northern and eastern parts of the
+Transvaal under such chiefs as Magata, &rsquo;Mpefu, and
+Siwasa; Swaziland; and the Matabele and Mashona
+tribes of the vast districts of Northern and Southern
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
+Rhodesia are the main instances of this first class.
+The aim of the different Governments has always been
+to keep the tribal organisation intact, and, after eliminating
+certain tribal laws and customs which are
+inconsistent with the ideas of white men, to give their
+sanction to the remainder. Basutoland is a Crown
+colony; the Transkeian territories are a native
+reserve; Bechuanaland is a native protectorate; in
+Rhodesia a number of native chiefs control large tracts
+of land under the Chartered Company&rsquo;s administration.
+Elsewhere the tribes live in Government
+reserves, or in certain cases in locations situated on
+private land. Between Pretoria and the Limpopo
+there are dozens of small chieftains and chieftainesses,
+with tribes varying in numbers from a hundred to
+several thousands. The second class, the detribalised
+natives, are to be found scattered over the whole
+country, notably in the western province of Cape
+Colony, and in the vicinity of all South African towns.
+They live as a rule in locations under municipal
+or Government supervision. In many cases such
+locations are far larger than those of a small chief;
+but their distinguishing feature is that they are
+governed solely by the law of the country or by
+municipal regulations framed for the purpose, and owe
+no allegiance to any chief or tribal system.</p>
+
+<p>It is obvious that for purposes of policy this distinction
+cannot maintain its importance. The rule
+of the chief is being rapidly undermined by natural
+causes, and no taking thought can bolster it up for
+ever. Education, too, and the closer settlement of the
+country by white men, are rapidly breaking down
+tribal customs and beliefs, which, as a rule, have more
+vitality than the isolated sentiment of allegiance. For
+us the real distinction is between the natives who can
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+be kept in large reserves or locations, whether tribal
+or otherwise, and the floating native population, which
+is every day growing in numbers. Sooner or later
+we must face the problem of the overcrowding of all
+reserves, and the consequent efflux of homeless and
+masterless men. The needs of progress, too, are daily
+tending to change the tribal native into the isolated
+native attached to some industry or other. Politically
+the question is, How far and on what lines the large
+reserves and locations can be best maintained, and
+what provision can be made for incorporating the
+overflow, which exists now and will soon exist in far
+greater numbers, on sane and rational lines in the
+body politic?</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">Such being the main requirements of the problem,
+it remains to consider the forms in which they present
+themselves to the ordinary man. For the working
+aspect of a question is generally very different from
+the form it takes in an academic analysis. The translation
+into the terms of everyday life is conditioned by
+many accidental causes, so that to one section of the
+community the labour problem is the sole one, to
+another the educational, to a third the social. It is
+important to realise that all are part of one question,
+and that no single one can be truly solved unless
+the whole is dealt with. This incompleteness of
+view, more than any other cause, has complicated
+the native question, and produced spurious antagonisms,
+and policies which are apparently rival, but
+in reality are complementary.</p>
+
+<p>The first is the grave difficulty which must always
+attend the existence of a subject race. Slavery is the
+extreme form of the situation, and in it we see the
+evils and dangers on a colossal scale. A subject population,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+to whom legal rights are denied, tends in the
+long-run to degrade the value of human life, and to
+depreciate the moral currency,&mdash;a result so deadly
+for true progress that the consensus of civilised races
+has utterly condemned it. The denial of social and
+political rights is almost equally dangerous, since,
+apart from the risks of perpetual tutelage in a progressive
+community, there follows necessarily a depreciation
+of those political truths upon which all free
+societies are based. Many honest men have clearly
+perceived this; but after the fashion of headstrong
+honesty, they have confused the issues by an inaccurate
+use of words. Legal rights must be granted,
+and since the law is the child of the fundamental
+principles of human justice, legal equality should follow.
+Social and political rights also must be given; but
+why social and political equality? The most embittered
+employer of native labour does not deny that
+the black man should share certain social privileges,
+and be made to feel his place in the political organism,
+but he rightly denies that rights mean equality of
+rights; while his doctrinaire opponent, arguing from
+exactly the same premises, claims a foolish equality on
+a misunderstanding of words. The essence of social
+and political equality must be a standard of education
+and moral and intellectual equipment, which can be
+roughly attributed to all members of the community
+concerned. But in this case there can be no such
+common standard. Between the most ignorant white
+man and the black man there is fixed for the present
+an impassable gulf, not of colour but of mind. The
+native is often quick of understanding, industrious,
+curiously logical, but he lives and moves in a mental
+world incredibly distant from ours. The medium of
+his thought, so to speak, is so unique that the results
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
+are out of all relation to ourselves. Mentally he is as
+crude and naïve as a child, with a child&rsquo;s curiosity
+and ingenuity, and a child&rsquo;s practical inconsequence.
+Morally he has none of the traditions of self-discipline
+and order, which are implicit, though often in a degraded
+form, in white people. In a word, he cannot
+be depended upon as an individual save under fairly
+vigilant restraint; and in the mass he forms an unknown
+quantity, compared with which a Paris mob
+is a Quaker meeting. With all his merits, this
+instability of character and intellectual childishness
+make him politically far more impossible than even
+the lowest class of Europeans. High property or
+educational qualifications for the franchise, or any other
+of the expedients of Europe, are logically out of place,
+though they were raised to the possession of a fortune
+and a university degree; for the mind is still there,
+unaltered, though it may be superficially ornamented.
+Give the native the full franchise, argues one class of
+observer, and he will in time show himself worthy of
+it, for in itself it is an education. On a strictly logical
+view it would be as reasonable to put a child on
+a steam-engine as driver, trusting that the responsibility
+of his position would be in itself an education
+and would teach him the necessary art.</p>
+
+<p>Social and political equality will seem to most men
+familiar with the subject a chimera, but social and
+political rights the native must have, and in most
+cases has already obtained. But unless such rights
+are carefully adjusted the absolute cleavage remains.
+We have two races, physically different, socially
+incapable of amalgamation: if we make the gulf
+final, there is no possibility of a united state; if
+we bridge it carelessly, the possibility is still more
+distant. We may scruple to grant rights, such as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>
+the political franchise, which are based in the last
+resort on a common moral and intellectual standard;
+but we can grant rights which are substantive and
+educative and capable of judicious extension. The
+Glen Grey Act, as we shall see, made a valuable
+experiment in securing to the native the social
+status which attends individual tenure of land.
+Some form of representation might be devised, by
+which a chief might have a voice on a district
+council, or a representative elected by an industrial
+location assist in local government. Such measures,
+joined with a rational system of education, will leave
+the door open for the extension of rights till such
+time as the native has finally shown whether he is
+worthy of equality or condemned by nature to rank
+for ever as a subject race. There are men, able
+men with the courage of their opinions, who see no
+hope in the matter, and who would segregate the
+natives in a separate territory under British protection.
+The chief objection to this policy is that it
+is impossible. The native is in our midst, and we
+must face the facts. We have a chance to solve
+a burning question which no other nation has had,
+since, as in the United States, the matter has either
+been complicated by initial slavery, or, as also in
+the States, a thoughtless plunge has been made
+into European doctrines of liberty, equality, and
+fraternity. If we patiently and skilfully bring to
+bear upon the black man the solvent and formative
+influences of civilisation, one of two things must
+happen. Either the native will prove himself worthy
+of an equal share in the body politic; or, the experiment
+having been honestly tried, he will sink
+back to his old place and gradually go the way of
+the Red Indian and the Hottentot. For it is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
+inevitable that civilisation, if wisely applied, must
+either raise him or choke him,&mdash;raise him to the
+rank of equal citizenship, or, by its hostility to his
+ineradicable qualities, prove a burden too heavy to
+support.</p>
+
+<p>The second is the ever-recurring problem of labour.
+In an earlier chapter the economic aspect of the
+question has been discussed; for the present we
+have to face that aspect which is connected with
+a native policy. The Kaffir is fundamentally an
+agriculturist, and when his lands are well situated
+he reaps enough for his simple existence with a
+minimum of labour. If he is rich enough to have
+several wives, they do the necessary picking and
+hoeing, and their lord and master sits in the shade
+of his hut and eats the bread of idleness. This was
+well enough in the old hunting and fighting days,
+when the male folk lived a strenuous life in the
+pursuit of game and the slaughter of their neighbours.
+But with civilisation close to their gates,
+the old system means a degraded somnolent life
+for the man, and the continuance of a real, though
+not necessarily unpleasant, form of slavery for the
+woman. And this in a country which is crying
+aloud for labour and development! To be sure, the
+foregoing is not a complete picture of all Kaffir life,
+but it is true of the larger reserves and the wealthier
+kraals. To most men it is an offence that the native,
+who is saved by British power from insecurity of
+life and limb, should be allowed to remain, by the
+happy accident of nature, an idler dependent only
+on the kindness of mother earth, multiplying his
+kind at an alarming rate, and untouched by the
+industrial struggle where his sinews are so sorely
+needed. The Kaffir owes his existence to the white
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
+man; in return he should be compelled to labour
+for hire and take his proper place in a world which
+has no room for his vegetating habits. He holds
+his land by our favour, he is protected from extinction
+by our arms, he enjoys the benefits of our laws;
+and he must pay for it all, not only in taxes but
+by a particular tax, a certain quantity of labour.
+This mode of argument sounds so serenely reasonable
+that one is apt to miss the very dangerous
+political doctrine which underlies it. Stated shortly,
+it runs thus. Compulsory labour without payment
+is to be reprobated like all forms of <i>corvée</i>, but if
+we pay what we regard as a fair price and make
+the compulsion indirect, then we get rid of such an
+objection. This doctrine involves two principles which
+seem to me to be subversive of all social order, and
+in particular of that civilisation which they profess
+to support. The Kaffir would be placed outside the
+play of economic forces. His wages would be arbitrarily
+established on an artificial basis, unalterable
+save at the will of his white masters. In the second
+place, compulsion by high taxation is not indirect
+compulsion, but one of the most direct forms of
+coercion known to history. To constrain a man
+indirectly is to use unseen forces and half-understood
+conditions which, being unrealised, do not
+impair his consciousness of liberty; but this is not
+the method which is proposed. A white man, it is
+argued, suffers want if he does not work. Well and
+good,&mdash;so does the Kaffir; but the work which he
+does, unless he is rich enough to have it vicariously
+performed, is different in kind from the work which
+others want him to do, and hence the trouble arises.
+To force a man, black or white, to enter on labour
+for which he is disinclined, is to rank him with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+beasts of burden, and prevent him, as an industrial
+creature, from ever attaining the conscious freedom
+which labour bestows. The old truth, so often misapplied,
+that a man who does not work shall not
+eat, is a statement of economic conditions to which
+those who quote it in this connection would seek
+to do violence.</p>
+
+<p>But such truisms do not exhaust the question. It
+is not the Kaffir who chiefly matters, for in his
+present stage of development he might be as well
+off one way as another; it is the white man&rsquo;s interests
+which must decide. If the whole of Kaffirdom
+were sunk in a state of feminine slavery and
+male indolence, violence might be done to political
+axioms with some show of reason; but the Kaffir
+is emerging from his savagery and has shown in
+more ways than one a capacity for industrial development.
+But, taking the Kaffir on the lowest plane,
+what is to be the effect on the white population of
+South Africa if forced labour is to stereotype for
+ever a lower race, to which the free selection of
+labour, the first requisite of progress, is denied?
+&ldquo;The safety of the commonwealth,&rdquo; wrote John
+Mackenzie, &ldquo;absolutely demands that no hatches be
+battened down over the heads of any part of the
+community.&rdquo; At the back of all the many excellent
+cases which have been made out for compulsory
+labour by high taxation, there lie the immediate
+needs of the great gold industry&mdash;needs which it is
+now clear can never be met in South Africa alone by
+any native legislation. An instant industrial demand
+is apt to blind many good men for the moment to
+those wider truths, which on other occasions they
+are ready enough to assent to. The case has been
+further prejudiced for most people by the bad arguments
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
+used on the native side, and the intolerable
+cant with which obvious truths have been sicklied
+over. We need not concern ourselves with the so-called
+degradation of Kaffir manhood implied in
+compulsory labour, for such self-conscious manhood
+does not exist; but we are very deeply concerned
+with the degradation of white manhood, which will
+inevitably follow any of the facile solutions which
+are cried in the market-place. If by violent methods
+economic laws are checked in their play, a subject
+race in a low state of civilisation is checked on the
+only side on which development can be reasonably
+looked for. The harder and lower forms of toil will
+fall into Kaffir hands for good; the white population
+will become an aristocracy based on a kind of slave
+labour; and with the abolition of an honest hierarchy
+of work, degeneration will set in with terrible swiftness.
+It is a pleasing dream this, of a community of
+cultivated white men above the needs of squalid or
+menial toil, but on such a dream no free nation was
+ever built. The old tribal system is crumbling, and
+in a hundred years or less we shall see the Kaffirs
+abroad in the land, closely knit to all industries
+and touching social and political life at countless
+points. If they are a portion, however small, of
+the civic organism, there is hope for the future; but
+if they are a thing apart, denied the commonest of
+all rights, and remaining in their present crude and
+stagnant condition, they will be a menace, political
+and moral, which no one can contemplate with
+equanimity. There are, indeed, only two entirely
+logical policies towards the native. Either remove
+him, bag and baggage, to some Central African
+reserve and leave him to fight his wars and live as
+he lived before the days of Tchaka, or bring him into
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+close and organic relation with those forces of a high
+civilisation which must inevitably mend or end him.</p>
+
+<p>There is a third chief aspect in which the native
+problem presents itself to the ordinary man. The
+Kaffir, south of the Zambesi, already outnumbers the
+white man by fully five to one, and he increases with
+at least twice the rapidity. Most native reserves and
+locations are overcrowded, the Kaffir is being driven
+on to private land as an unauthorised squatter, and
+the floating population in and around the towns is
+daily increasing. What is to be the end of this
+fecundity? Living on little, subject apparently to
+none of the natural or prudential checks on over-population,
+there seems a real danger of black ultimately
+swamping white by mere gross quantity. In any
+case there will soon be a grave economic crisis, for,
+unless prompt measures are adopted, a large loose
+vagabondage will grow up all over the land. It is
+to be noted that this danger is the converse of the
+two problems we have already discussed. They referred
+to the stereotyping of the Kaffir races as a
+settled agricultural people out of line with industrial
+progress; this concerns the inevitable break-up of
+the old agricultural condition by mere excess of
+population and the difficulty of dealing with the
+overflow. This complementary character which the
+problems assume is one of the most hopeful features
+of the case. Natural forces are bringing the Kaffir to
+our hands. The <i>débâcle</i> of his old life is turning him
+upon the world to be formed and constrained at our
+pleasure. The field is clear for experiment, and it
+behoves us to make up our minds clearly on the forms
+which the experiment must take.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">To recapitulate the results of the preceding pages.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
+The central problem is how to bring the native races
+under the play of civilising forces, so that they
+may either approve themselves as capable of incorporation
+in the body politic, or show themselves
+eternally incapable, in which case history would lead
+us to believe that they will gradually disappear. To
+effect this vital experiment, no rigid economic or
+social barrier should be placed between them and the
+white inhabitants. Since the old tribal organisation
+is breaking up, the ground is being rapidly prepared
+for the trial. It is our business, therefore, to consider
+how best the system of tribes and reserves can
+be maintained, so long as there is in it the stuff of
+life, and what new elements can be introduced which
+will make its fall more safe and gradual; and, in the
+second place, to devise ways and means for dealing
+with the rapidly increasing loose native population,
+for replacing the former tribal traditions with some
+rudiments of civilised law, and for leaving an open
+door for such development as may be within their
+capacity. It will be convenient to look at ways and
+means under three heads. There is, first, the general
+question of taxation, which is common to all. There
+is, secondly, the problem of the larger reserves, and
+the maintenance, so far as is desirable, of the old
+rural life, with the kindred questions of land tenure,
+of local government, of surplus population, and of
+labour. And, finally, there is the problem of the class
+which in the last resort is destined to be most numerous,
+the wholly non-tribal and unattached natives,
+whose mode of life must be created afresh and controlled
+by Government. This is the most difficult
+problem, since such natives are peculiarly exposed to
+the solvents of white civilisation, and everything depends
+upon the method in which the solvents are used.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+The native is, for the most part, under special
+taxes. In certain parts of Cape Colony and Natal
+the fiscal system is in practice the same for black and
+white, but for the purposes of this inquiry the native
+who has adopted the white man&rsquo;s life may be disregarded.
+In Cape Colony the hut tax is 10s. per
+annum, whether the hut is situated on private or
+Crown lands, and on locations within municipalities a
+similar municipal tax is paid. In Natal the hut tax
+is 14s., in Basutoland £1, in Rhodesia 10s., and in the
+Transvaal and Orange River Colony 10s. under the
+old <i>régime</i>. In Natal, the Orange River Colony, the
+Transvaal, and Rhodesia, there was also a native pass
+law, under which certain sums were charged on travelling
+passes, varying from 6d. in the Orange River
+Colony to 2s. per month in the mining areas of the
+Transvaal. It is unnecessary to go into the numerous
+details of native taxation, which within narrow
+limits are constantly varied, but it is worth while to
+look at two instances which may be taken as the extreme
+types of such taxation, the Transvaal under the
+former Government and the districts of Cape Colony
+subject to the Glen Grey Act. In the Transvaal the
+natives for the most part are tribal, and the system
+of taxation was based on tribal considerations; but
+the bulk of the revenue under the Pass Law came
+from the large fluctuating population of natives at
+work on the mines. Under the old Government the
+ordinary native paid 10s. as hut tax, £2 as capitation
+fee, with sundry other charges for passes, &amp;c., which
+brought the whole amount which might be levied up
+to fully £4. The tax was loosely collected, but on the
+whole the taxation per head was reasonably high.
+One of the first acts of the new administration was
+to consolidate all native taxes in one general poll
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+tax of £2, with a further charge of £2 per wife for
+natives who had more than one. The pass fee was
+also charged upon the employer in districts where it
+fell to be levied. The net result, therefore, is that for
+a native, who is the husband of not more than one
+wife, the sum payable yearly is about £3, made up
+of the poll tax and the registration fee. A native
+may have to pay more than the old Government
+exacted, but if he pleases he can pay less. In the
+districts under the Glen Grey Act individual ownership
+of land is encouraged, and the native who has
+attained to such tenure is practically in the position
+of a white citizen&mdash;that is, he pays no hut tax or poll
+tax, and his contributions to revenue consist in the
+payment of such rates as his district council or the
+Transkeian General Council may levy. For the
+native who holds no land either on quit-rent or freehold
+title, there is a labour tax of 10s. per annum,
+which he can avoid by showing that he has been at
+work outside the district for a period of three months
+during the previous year, and from which he can gain
+complete exemption by showing that at some time he
+has worked for a total period of three years. Such
+a tax is not a compulsory labour tax, but should
+rather be regarded as a modification of the hut tax,
+which can be remitted as a bonus on outside labour.</p>
+
+<p>The contrast between the two forms of taxation is
+obvious, the one being a special and peculiar type,
+the other a modification of the general fiscal system
+of the colony. It is to the latter type that all
+systems of native taxation must tend to approximate.
+There are certain obvious objections to the hut tax,
+of which the chief is that it leads to overcrowding
+and bad sanitation, and prevents young men from
+building huts of their own; and perhaps it would
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
+be well if, following the new Transvaal precedent,
+all native taxes were consolidated into one comprehensive
+poll tax. But, speaking generally, natives
+are not heavily taxed<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> having regard to their wage-earning
+capacity, though hitherto the Customs have
+been unduly hard upon their simple commodities.
+In the Transvaal, for example, there is little doubt
+that the native population could bear for revenue
+purposes in most years a poll tax of £3 per head.
+This might be reduced in case of natives in industrial
+employment, in consideration of the fact that such
+natives contribute otherwise to revenue through the
+Pass Law. It is one of the ironies of this South
+African problem that increased and reasonable taxation
+for revenue purposes will continue to be identified
+in many minds with compulsory labour through
+high taxation. The two things are as wide apart as
+the poles. The native, in return for protection and
+good government, is required to pay a certain sum per
+annum calculated solely on fiscal needs and his earning
+capacity. That is the only basis of native taxation;
+but when the sum has been fixed, it may be expedient
+as a matter of policy to reduce the tax in the case of
+natives working under an employer, partly because
+such natives contribute to the Exchequer in another
+way, and partly as a bonus to encourage outside
+labour. But the general form of taxation might
+well be altered, slowly and cautiously, as the time
+ripened. The hut tax might be gradually transmuted
+into a form of rent which, as in the Glen Grey
+districts, could be lowered as a bonus on outside
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+labour, and the extension of local government might
+provide for the rating of locations and reserves on
+some system common to all districts. Taxation may
+have an educative force, and to ask from the native
+a contribution for something of which the purpose is
+apparent and the justification obvious, is to bestow on
+him a kind of freedom. It is the first step to taxation
+with representation to provide that taxation should
+be accompanied by understanding.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">The second question is that of existing reserves and
+the possibility and method of their maintenance. In
+the case of many the problem is still simple. Basutoland,
+the chief tribes of the Bechuanaland Protectorate
+and Southern Rhodesia, Swaziland, Zululand, the races
+of the north and north-eastern Transvaal, and a considerable
+part of the Transkeian territories, will find
+for many years protected tribal government suitable
+to their needs. Tribal customs and laws, in so far as
+they are not <i>contra bonos mores</i>, are recognised by the
+protecting Governments, and given effect to by any
+white courts which may have jurisdiction in the district.
+The old modes of land tenure, the succession
+to the chieftainship, the tribal religion, if any exists,
+should be given the sanction of the sovereign Power
+till such time as they crumble from their own baselessness.
+The disintegrating forces are many and
+potent. Taxation will compel the acquisition of
+wealth other than in kind, and will therefore
+strengthen existing trade, and, if gradually modified
+in character till it approach a rating system,
+will replace the tribe by the district as a local unit.
+The growth of population will compel a certain overflow,
+which must either be accommodated on new
+land under special conditions, or must go to swell
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
+the general industrial community. Education, the
+greatest of all disintegrators, is loosening slowly the
+old ties, and is increasing the wants of the native
+by enlarging his mental horizon. Outside labour,
+whether undertaken from love of novelty or from
+sheer economic pressure, leaves its indelible mark
+on the labourer. The Kaffir who has worked for
+two years in Kimberley or Johannesburg may seem
+to have returned completely to his old stagnant life,
+but there is a new element at work in him and his
+kindred, a new curiosity, a weakening of his regard
+for his traditional system. Agriculture itself, which
+has hitherto been the mainstay of his conservatism, is
+rapidly becoming a force of revolution. Formerly no
+self-respecting native would engage in cultivation,
+leaving such tasks to his women; but a native who
+would not touch pick or hoe is ready enough to work
+a plough, if he is so fortunate as to possess one. The
+growth of wealth and a spirit of enterprise among the
+tribes leads to improved tillage, and once the native
+is content to labour himself in the fields, his old scheme
+of society is already crumbling.</p>
+
+<p>But, in addition to natural solvents, there is one
+which we might well apply in our own interest
+against the time when the tribal system shall have
+finally disappeared. Any form of political franchise,
+however safeguarded, is in my opinion illogical and
+dangerous. It is inequitable to create barriers which
+are themselves artificial, but it is both inequitable
+and impolitic to disregard natural barriers when the
+basis of our politics is a presumed natural equality.
+But it may be possible to admit the Kaffir to a share
+in self-government without giving any adherence to
+the doctrine involved in a grant of a national franchise.
+Local government is still in its infancy all over South
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
+Africa, but the common type is some form of urban
+or district council. The questions which such councils
+discuss do not involve high considerations of statescraft,
+but simple practical matters, such as roads and
+bridges, sanitary restrictions, precautions against stock
+diseases, and market rules. Supposing that in any
+district there exists a tribe or a location sufficiently
+progressive and orderly, I see no real difficulty in
+bringing the chief or induna sooner or later directly
+or indirectly into the local council. It is a matter on
+which it is idle to dogmatise, being one of the many
+questions on which South Africa must say the last
+word, and being further dependent on the status
+of the natives in each district; but on a nominated
+or elective council a native, or a white member with
+natives in his constituency, might do valuable work in
+assisting with matters in which natives were largely
+concerned. A native who cannot reasonably be asked
+to decide on questions such as fiscal reform or military
+organisation, may be very well fitted to advise, as
+a large stock-holder, on precautionary measures
+against rinderpest. If such a step is ever taken&mdash;and
+the present exclusive attitude of South Africa
+is rather a sign of the growing solidarity of the
+community than an index of a permanent conviction&mdash;an
+advance of enormous import will have been
+made in that branch of native education in which we
+are almost powerless to move directly, namely, his
+training as a responsible citizen.</p>
+
+<p>As the tribal system breaks down from whatever
+cause, the tribesmen must do one of three things&mdash;either
+settle on the land on new conditions, or live
+permanently in the service of employers, or swell the
+loose population of town and country. The second
+course does not concern us, being a matter for the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+private law of master and servant. But in each
+of the other courses the State is profoundly interested.
+For the sake of the future it is necessary to have
+the existing reserves thoroughly examined, for, since
+the fluctuations of native populations are very great,
+many are too small for their present occupants and a
+few are too spacious. Majajie&rsquo;s location in Zoutpansberg,
+and one or two of the reserves on the western
+border of the Transvaal, may be quoted as instances
+of tribes which have shrunk from the original number
+on which the grant of land was based. In such cases
+the land might reasonably be curtailed, since it is still
+Crown land held in trust for the natives&rsquo; use, and not
+private land purchased by the chiefs themselves. But
+it is more usual to find locations far too narrow, and
+the result in many parts is that a certain number of
+natives who have been compelled to leave their old
+reserves are farming private lands on precarious and
+burdensome terms, or are squatting on Crown lands
+with no legal tenure at all. A law of the late
+Transvaal Government (No. 21 of 1895) made it
+illegal to have more than five native households on
+one private farm; but this law, like many others
+which conflicted with the interests of the governing
+class, was quietly allowed to become a dead letter.
+There are men to-day who have a hundred and more
+native families on a farm, paying often exorbitant
+rents either in money or in forced labour, and liable
+to be turned adrift at a moment&rsquo;s notice. The old
+Boer system was to allow natives to squat on land in
+return for six months&rsquo; labour; but this mode of payment
+is never satisfactory with a Kaffir, who soon
+forgets the tenure on which he holds his land, regards
+it as his own, and makes every attempt to evade his
+tenant&rsquo;s service. The whole position is unsatisfactory,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>
+the master being cumbered with unwilling and often
+worthless labour, the tenant subject to a capricious
+rent and a permanent possibility of eviction. In the
+interests of both white and black it is desirable to
+end this anomaly. Some form of the Squatters&rsquo; Law
+might be re-enacted and enforced, a farmer being
+allowed a reasonable number of native families, who
+give work for wages and pay a fair rent for their land.
+The balance might well be accommodated as tenants on
+such portions of Crown land as are suitable for Kaffirs
+and incapable of successful white settlement. Such
+lands exist in the parts where the native population is
+densest, as in the northern and eastern districts of
+the Transvaal. The situation affords an opportunity
+for the Government policy towards outside labour.
+If the rent per holding were fixed at some figure like
+£10 (which is less than many natives pay to private
+owners) it might be reduced to £5, if a certain proportion
+of the males of a household went out to labour
+for a part of the year in the towns or in some rural
+employment other than farming. Such a policy would
+give immediate relief to the really serious congestion
+in many districts, would establish a better system of
+native tenure, and would pave the way for a closer
+connection between the industrial native and the
+country kraal.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">The wholly detribalised native is a more important
+problem, because he represents the type of what the
+Kaffir will in some remote future become&mdash;a man who
+has forgotten his race traditions, and has become an
+unpopular attaché of the white community. Towards
+other natives our policy must be only to maintain an
+amended <i>status quo</i>, but for him we must make an
+effort at construction. It is no business of mine to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span>
+frame policies, but only to sketch, roughly and imperfectly,
+the conditions of the problem which the constructive
+statesman (and South Africa will long have
+need of constructive statesmen) must face. Individual
+tenure of land&mdash;and by this is not necessarily meant
+freehold, even under the Glen Grey restrictions as to
+alienation, for a long lease may be more politic and
+equally attractive<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>&mdash;and the spread of education and
+commerce will work to the same effect in the rural
+districts as industrial employment in the towns. But
+for the present the towns furnish the gravest problem&mdash;how
+to make adequate provision for the increasing
+native population, which is neither living permanently
+in the households of white masters nor working in
+the mines under a time contract. It is desirable to
+have locations for natives, as it is fitting to provide
+bazaars for Asiatics, since the native should be concentrated
+both for administrative and educational
+purposes. Those municipal locations, which already
+exist in many towns, will have to be taken vigorously
+in hand. Something must replace the biscuit-tin
+shanties where the native, ignorant of sanitation,
+lives, under more wretched conditions, what is practically
+the life of a country kraal, and with the reform
+of their habitations a new attraction to industry will
+exist for the better class of Kaffir. It is a common
+mistake to class all natives together, a mistake which
+a little knowledge of South African ethnology and
+history would prevent. Many have highly developed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
+instincts of cleanliness, and much race pride, and will
+not endure to be huddled in squalid locations with
+the refuse of inferior tribes. Given decent dwelling-places,
+education on rational lines, and after a time,
+perhaps, a share in municipal government, might lay
+the foundation of a civic life and an industrial usefulness
+far more lasting than can be expected from
+casual labourers brought from distant homes for a
+few months&rsquo; work, and carried back again.</p>
+
+<p>South Africa has in her day possessed one man who
+desired to look at things as they are, a murky and
+distorted genius at times, but at his best inspired
+with something of a prophet&rsquo;s insight. The fruit of
+Mr Rhodes&rsquo; native administration was the Glen Grey
+Act, which still remains the only attempt at a constructive
+native policy. It is hard enough to govern,
+but sometimes, looking to the iron necessities in the
+womb of time, it is wise to essay a harder task, and
+build. We must keep open our communications with
+the future, and begin by recognising the fundamental
+truths, which are apt to get a little dimmed by the
+dust of the political arena. The first is that the
+native is psychologically a child, and must be treated
+as such; that is, he is in need of a stricter discipline
+and a more paternal government than the white man.
+South Africa has already recognised this by the
+remarkable consensus of opinion which she has shown
+in the prohibition of the sale of intoxicants to coloured
+people. He is as incapable of complete liberty as
+he is undeserving of an unintelligent censure. The
+second is that he is with us, a permanent factor which
+must be reckoned with, in spite of the advocates of a
+crude Bismarckian policy; and because his fortunes
+are irrevocably linked to ours, it is only provident to
+take care that the partnership does not tend to our
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span>
+moral and political disadvantage. For there is always
+in the distance a grim alternative of over-population
+resulting in pauperism and anarchy, or a hard despotism
+producing the moral effects which the conscience
+of the world has long ago in slave systems diagnosed
+and condemned. There are three forces already at
+work which, if judiciously fostered, will achieve the
+experiment which South Africa is bound to make, and
+either raise the Kaffir to some form of decent citizenship,
+or prove to all time that he is incapable of true
+progress. Since we are destroying the old life, with
+its moral and social codes and its checks upon economic
+disaster, we are bound to provide an honest substitute.
+The forces referred to are those of a modified self-government,
+of labour, and of an enlightened education.
+The first is an experiment which must be
+undertaken very carefully, unless our case is to be
+prejudiced from the outset. I have given reasons for
+the view that a political franchise for the native is
+logically unjustifiable; but on district councils and
+within municipal areas the native, wherever he is
+living under conditions of tolerable decency and
+comfort, might well play a part in his own control.
+It may be doomed to failure or it may be the
+beginning of political education, but it is an experiment
+we can scarcely fail to make. In labour, short
+of a crude compulsion, every means must be used to
+bring the Kaffir within the industrial circle. We shall
+be assisted in our task by many secret forces, but it
+should be our business so to frame our future native
+legislation as to place a bonus on labour outside the
+kraal. The matter is so intimately bound up with
+the wellbeing of the whole population that there is
+less fear of neglect than of undue and capricious
+haste.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
+A word remains to be said on native education. In
+this province there is much need of effective Government
+control, since in the past the energies of
+educationalists have tended to flow in mistaken
+channels or be dissipated over too wide an area.
+The native is apt to learn in a kind of parrot
+fashion, and this aptitude has misled many who have
+devoted their lives to his interests. But in the
+present state of his culture what we are used to
+call the &ldquo;humanities&rdquo; have little educational importance.
+At the best the result is to turn out native
+pastors and schoolmasters in undue numbers, unfortunate
+men who have no proper professional field
+and no footing in the society to which their education
+might entitle them. It is a truth which the wiser
+sort of missionaries all over the world are now recognising
+in connection with the propagation of Christianity&mdash;that
+the ground must be slowly prepared
+before the materialist savage mind can be familiarised
+with the truths of a spiritual religion. Otherwise
+the result is a glib confession of faith which ends in
+scandal. The case is the same with what we call
+&ldquo;secondary education.&rdquo; The teaching of natives, if
+it is to produce any practical good, should, to begin
+with, be confined to the elements and to technical
+instruction. The native mind is very ready to learn
+anything which can be taught by concrete instances,
+and most forms of manual dexterity, even some of the
+more highly skilled, come as easily to him as to the
+white man. When the boys are taught everywhere
+carpentry and ironwork and the rudiments of trade,
+and the girls sewing and basket-making and domestic
+employments, a far more potent influence will have
+been introduced than the Latin grammar or the
+primer of history. The wisest missionary I have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
+ever met had a station which was a kind of ideal
+city for order and industry, with carpenters&rsquo; and
+blacksmiths&rsquo; shops, a model farm, basket-making,
+orchards, and dairies. &ldquo;By these means,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;I am teaching my children the elements of religion,
+which are honesty, cleanliness, and discipline.&rdquo; &ldquo;And
+dogma?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;as to dogma,
+I think we must be content for the present with a
+few stories and hymns.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a>
+It is proposed to assimilate native taxation in Southern Rhodesia to
+the system now in vogue in the Transvaal, and impose a poll tax of £2,
+with a tax of 10s. for each extra wife. In the Orange River Colony it is
+proposed to raise the hut tax to £1.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a>
+The question of native ownership of land in the new colonies is not
+very clear. In the Transvaal land was generally held in trust for natives
+by the Native Commissioners; but apparently half-castes could own
+land, and Asiatics under certain restrictions. In the Orange River
+Colony ownership by Asiatics is forbidden; but certain native tribes,
+such as the Barolongs in Maroka, and the Oppermans at Jacobsdaal,
+as well as half-castes and the people known as the Bastards, were
+allowed freehold titles, subject to certain restrictions on alienation.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XV.</h3>
+
+<h4>JOHANNESBURG.</h4>
+
+<p>It is a delicate matter to indulge in platitudes about a
+city. For a city is an organism more self-conscious
+than a state, and a personality less robust than an
+individual. Comments which, if made on a nation,
+would be ignored, and on an individual would be
+tolerated, awaken angry reprisals when directed to a
+municipal area. The business is still more delicate
+when the city concerned is not yet quite sure of
+herself. Johannesburg is a city, though she has no
+cathedral to support the conventional definition, or
+royal warrant to give her dignitaries precedence;
+but she is a city still on trial, sensitive, ambitious,
+profoundly ignorant of her own mind. Her past
+has been short and checkered. She has done many
+things badly and many things well; she has been
+the target for universal abuse, and still with one
+political party fills the honourable post of whipping-boy
+in chief to the Empire. Small wonder if her
+people are a little dazed&mdash;proud of themselves,
+hopeful of her future, but far from clear what this
+future is to be.</p>
+
+<p>At first sight she has nothing to commend her.
+The traveller who drags his stiff limbs from the Cape
+mail sees before him a dusty road, some tin-roofed
+shanties, with a few large new jerry buildings humped
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+above them: a number of straggling dusty pines and
+gums, a bit of bare hillside in the distance, and a few
+attenuated mine chimneys. Everything is new, raw,
+and fortuitous, as uncivilised and certainly as ugly as
+the desert ridge on which an old Bezuidenhout planted
+his homestead. The chief streets do not efface the
+first impression. Some buildings are good, but the
+general effect is mean. The place looks as if it had
+sprung up, like some Western township, in a night,
+and as if the original builders had been in such a
+desperate hurry to get done with it that they could
+not stop to see that one house kept line with its
+neighbours. It is a common South African defect,
+but there is here no <i>mise-en-scène</i> to relieve the ugliness.
+Looking at Pretoria from the hills one sees a
+forest of trees, with white towers and walls rising
+above the green. The walls may be lath and plaster,
+but the general effect is as pretty as the eye could
+wish. For Johannesburg there is no such salvation.
+Looked at from one of her many hills, the meanness
+and irregularity are painfully clear. She has far more
+trees than Pretoria, but she is so long and sprawling
+that the bare ribs have pushed aside their covering.
+An extended brickfield is the first impression: a prosperous
+powder-factory is the last.</p>
+
+<p>Yet in her way she has many singular beauties.
+Doubtless in time to come she will be so great that
+she will contain more cities than one in her precincts,
+and there may well be a residential quarter as fine
+as any in Europe. The Rand is a long shallow
+basin with hilly rims, within which lie the mines and
+the working city. The southern rim shelves away
+into featureless veld, but the northern sinks sharply
+on a plain, across forty miles of which rise the gaunt
+lines of the Magaliesberg. What fashionable suburb
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>
+has a vista of forty miles of wild country, with a
+mountain wall on the horizon? Below on the flats
+there are many miles of pine woods, valleys and
+streams and homesteads, and the Pretoria road making
+a bold trail over a hill. In winter the horizon is lit
+with veld-fires; in summer and spring there are the
+wild sunsets of the veld and soft mulberry gloamings.
+The slope behind shuts out the town and the mine
+chimneys, and yet the whole place is not three miles
+from Market Square. Whatever happens, nothing
+can harm the lucky dwellers on the ridge. Though
+the city creep ten miles into the plain beneath, there
+is still ample prospect; and not all the fumes from all
+the industries on earth can spoil the sharp vigour of
+the winds blowing clean from the wilds.</p>
+
+<p>But the place has not yet found itself. The city
+proper is still for the future; for the present we have
+a people. What the real conception, current in England,
+of this people may be it is not easy to tell, the
+whole matter having been transferred to party politics,
+and presented, plain or coloured, to partisan spectators.
+So we are given every possible picture, from
+that of Semitic adventurers nourishing the fires of life
+on champagne, to that of a respectable and thoroughly
+domesticated people, morbidly awake to every sentiment
+of Empire. &ldquo;Judasburg,&rdquo; &ldquo;the New Jerusalem,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;the Golden City,&rdquo; and a variety of other pet names,
+show that to the ordinary man, both in and out of
+parties, there is something bizarre and exotic about
+the place. And yet no conception could be more
+radically false. Johannesburg is first and foremost a
+colonial city, an ordinary colonial city save for certain
+qualities to be specified later. You will see more Jews
+in it than in Montreal or Aberdeen, but not more than
+in Paris; and any smart London restaurant will show
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+as large a Semitic proportion as a Johannesburg club.
+For a &ldquo;Golden City&rdquo; it is not even conspicuously
+vulgar. For one fellow in large checks, diamonds,
+and a pink satin tie, you will meet fifty quietly
+dressed, well-mannered gentlemen. A man may still
+be a beggar to-day and rich to-morrow, but less commonly
+and in a different sense. The old mining-camp,
+California-cum-Ballarat character of the gold industry
+on the Rand has utterly passed away. Gold-mining
+has ceased to be a speculation, and has become a vast
+and complicated industry, employing at high salaries
+the first engineering talent of the world. The prominent
+mine-owner is frequently a man of education,
+almost invariably a man of high ability. In few
+places can you find men of such mental vigour, so
+eagerly receptive of new ideas, so keenly awake to
+every change of the financial and political worlds of
+Europe. The blackguard alien exists, to be sure, but
+he is rarely felt, and the hand of the law is heavy
+upon him. That Johannesburg is made up wholly of
+adventurers and Whitechapel Jews is the first piece
+of cant to clear the mind of.</p>
+
+<p>The second is the old slander that the people
+think of nothing but the market, are cowardly and
+selfish, indifferent to patriotism and honour. It says
+little for Englishmen that they could believe this
+falsehood of a place where the greater part of the
+inhabitants are English. The war meant dismal
+sufferings for the artisan class, who had to live in
+expensive coast lodgings or comfortless camps; and it
+is to the credit of Johannesburg that she stood nobly
+by her refugees. The old Reform movement was not
+a fortunate enterprise, but there was no lack of courage
+in it; and even those who may grudge the attribute
+can scarcely deny it to the same men at Elandslaagte
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
+and Ladysmith. There have been various sorts of
+irregular regiments&mdash;many good, some bad, one or two
+the very scum of the earth; but no irregular soldiers
+showed, from first to last, a more cool and persistent
+courage than the men who for years had sought to
+achieve by persuasion an end which required a more
+summary argument. The truth is that the Johannesburger
+has suffered by being contrasted, as the typical
+townsman, with the Boer, as the typical countryman.
+Dislike the particular countryman as we may, we have
+at the back of our minds a feeling that somehow, in
+George Eliot&rsquo;s phrase, an unintelligible dialect is a
+guarantee for ingenuousness, and that slouching
+shoulders indicate an upright disposition. It is
+Johannesburg&rsquo;s misfortune that this anomalous contrast
+should be forced on us. It is as if a sixteenth-century
+peasant, without enterprise, without culture,
+wholly un-modern and un-political, believing stoutly
+in a sombre God, were living side by side with a
+race of <i>intellectuels</i>, scientists, and successful merchants.
+Whatever reason or, as in this case, patriotism may
+say, most men have a sneaking fondness for the
+peasant.</p>
+
+<p>In every community which is worth consideration
+we find two forces present in some degree&mdash;the
+force of social persistence and the force of social
+movement. Critics of Johannesburg would have us
+believe that the second only is to be found, and in
+its crudest form: the truth is that, considering the
+history of the place and its novelty, the first is
+remarkably strong. The point is worth labouring at
+the risk of tediousness. It must be some little while
+before a mining city shakes off the character of a
+mining camp. Men will long choose to live uncomfortably
+in hotels and boarding-houses, looking for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
+their reward on their home-coming, discomfort none
+the less unpleasant because it is tempered with unmeaning
+luxury. To its inhabitants the place is no
+continuing city,&mdash;only a camp for the adventurer, who,
+when he has made the most of it, returns to enjoy the
+fruits of his labour in his own place. And then, after
+many years, there suddenly comes a day when a man
+here and a man there realise that they have lost the
+desire to return: they like the place, settle down, and
+found a home. Whenever there is any fair proportion
+of this class in a mining city, then we have a force of
+social persistence. The tendency is found in every
+class of society. At one time the miner from Wales
+or Cornwall saved his earnings and returned home;
+now he has his wife out and settles for good. There
+is also a large commercial class, traders and small
+manufacturers, who belong as thoroughly to the place
+as the South African born. And with the more
+educated classes the same thing is true. The price of
+building sites in the suburbs and the many pretty
+houses which have arisen show that even for this class,
+which was most nomadic in its habits, domesticity has
+become a fact.</p>
+
+<p>This, then, is the cardinal achievement of Johannesburg,
+an unparalleled achievement in so short a career.
+She has in a few years changed herself from a camp
+to a city, acquired a middle class and a decent artisan
+class,&mdash;both slow and difficult growths,&mdash;and shown a
+knack of absorbing any species of alien immigrant and
+putting them on the way to respectable citizenship.
+She has but to point to this solid achievement as a
+final answer to the foolish calumnies of her enemies.
+The mines are her staple industry, but the mines, so
+far as she is concerned, are an industry and not a
+speculation; and she is creating a dozen other industries
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span>
+of quite a different character, and may well
+create a hundred more. She has become a municipality,
+with all the traits, good and bad, of a nourishing
+municipality at home. She has become colonial,
+too,&mdash;as colonial, though in a different way, as Melbourne
+or Wellington. Formerly she was a mixture
+of every European capital plus a little of the Dutch
+dorp: now she is English in essence, the most English
+of all South African towns.</p>
+
+<p>The future of the chief municipality of South Africa
+cannot be without interest, for most problems will
+concern her first, and receive from her their colour
+and character, and, possibly, their answer. She must
+continue to represent one of the two foremost interests,
+and though it is idle to distinguish political
+interests by their importance when both are vital, yet
+we can admit that Johannesburg has for the moment
+more obvious difficulties in her problems, and that her
+answer will be more stormily contested. So far her
+development has been continuous. The difficulties
+which she met with from the Kruger <i>régime</i> were a
+blessing in disguise, being of the kind to put her on
+her mettle. But the present stage in her history is
+more critical. Formerly the question was whether
+she was to remain a foreign cesspool or rise to the
+status of an English city. Now it is whether she will
+go the way of many colonial cities, and become vigorous,
+dogmatic, proud, remotely English in sentiment,
+consistently material in her outlook, and narrow with
+the intense narrowness of those to whom politics mean
+local interests spiced with rhetoric; or, as she is
+already richer, more enlightened, and more famous
+than her older sisters, will advance on a higher plane,
+and become in the true sense an imperial city, with a
+closer kinship and a more liberal culture. The question
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
+is a subtle and delicate one, as all questions of
+spiritual development must be. A year ago much
+depended on the attitude of England. Johannesburg
+had suffered heavily in the war. Time and patience
+were needed to repair the breaches in her fortunes,
+and to permit her to advance, as she must advance, if
+the Transvaal is to become a nation. She was rightly
+jealous of her reputation and future prosperity. If
+taxation was to be crudely imposed, if her just complaints
+were to be met with the old nonsense about a
+capitalists&rsquo; war, if she was to be penalised for her
+most creditable industry, then there was a good prospect
+of a serious estrangement. There was no issue
+on the facts. She never denied her liability, and she
+was willing to pay cheerfully if a little common tact
+were shown in the handling. A man who may have
+his hand in his pocket to repay a debt will withdraw
+it if his creditor tries to collect the money with a
+bludgeon. Happily the crisis has passed. A scheme
+of war contribution was arranged which, while still
+bearing heavily, almost too heavily, on the country in
+its present transition stage, is yet a small sum if contrasted
+with the lowest estimate of her assets. But
+much still depends on the attitude of England. A
+little sympathy, a little friendliness, a modest diminution
+of newspaper taunts, some indication that the
+home country sees and appreciates the difficulties of
+its daughter, and is content to trust her judgment:
+it is not much to ask, but its refusal will never be
+forgotten or forgiven. For Johannesburg in this connection
+represents the country on its most sensitive
+side, and acts as a barometer of national feeling.</p>
+
+<p>In this imperfect world there can be no development
+without attendant disorders. A dead body is
+never troublesome, but a growing child is prone to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>
+exasperate. A young city which is perfectly reasonable
+and docile deserves to be regarded with deep
+mistrust, for it is likely to continue in a kind of
+youthful sensibility till it disappears. Ferment is a
+sign of life, and the very crudeness of the ideals
+which cause the ferment is a hopeful proof of vigour.
+Municipalities since the beginning of time have been
+the home of aspirations after self-government, however
+ill-suited they may have been to rule themselves.
+At this moment the Transvaal is a Crown colony,
+which is to say that a mode of government devised
+for subject races is being applied for a time to a
+free and restless British population. The justification
+is complete, but we need not be shocked when we
+find Johannesburg chafing at her fetters. The less
+so when we reflect that in one aspect she is a
+colonial city, full of the exaggerated independence
+of the self-made. The fastidiousness which comes
+from culture and tradition, the humour which springs
+from unshaken confidence, must necessarily be absent
+in a municipality which is still diffident, still largely
+uneducated. Politics must begin with the <i>schwärmerisch</i>
+and the vapid,&mdash;&ldquo;that vague barren pathos,
+that useless effervescence of enthusiasm, which plunges
+with the spirit of a martyr into an ocean of generalities.&rdquo;
+Embryo cities are drunk with words, with
+half-formed aspirations and vague ideals; wherefore
+the result must be sound and fury and little meaning
+till by painful stages they find themselves and see
+things as they are. So far this unrest has taken
+two forms&mdash;a continuous and somewhat unintelligent
+criticism of the Administration, and an attempt by
+means of numerous associations to give voice to
+popular demands in the absence of representative
+institutions; and the beginnings of a labour party.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>
+The first is as natural as day and night. Many grave
+matters, chiefly financial, are being decided above
+Johannesburg&rsquo;s head, and it is reasonable that she
+should wish to state her own case. This is her
+strong point: the weakness of her position is that
+it is also a criticism of a reconstruction which is
+still in process, still in that stage when the facts are
+far more clearly perceived by the man on the watch-tower
+than by the crowd in the streets below. A
+pawn in a game is not the best authority on the
+moves which lead to success. Patience may be a
+distasteful counsel, but why should she disquiet
+herself when all things in the end must be in her
+hands? &ldquo;The people,&rdquo; to paraphrase a saying of
+Heine, &ldquo;have time enough, they are immortal; administrators
+only must pass away.&rdquo; But we cannot
+complain of this critical activity, however misplaced.
+It is a sign of life, and is itself the beginnings of
+political education. The second form of agitation is
+less reasonable and more dangerous, though perhaps
+less dangerous here than anywhere else in the world.
+There must exist on the Rand, in mines, railways,
+and subsidiary industries, a large white industrial
+population; and the imported agitator will endeavour
+to organise it in accordance with his interests.
+There is little theoretical justification for the movement.
+There are no castes and tyrannies to fight
+against in a country which is so new and self-created.
+The great financial houses will not develop
+into Trusts on the American model; and even
+if they did, the result would have small effect on
+the working man, either as labourer or consumer.
+There are dozens of false pretexts. The working
+man of the Rand may try, as he has tried in
+Australia, to stereotype his monopoly and prevent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
+the influx of new labour; or he may use the necessary
+discomforts of a transition stage as a lever to
+raise his wages; or the idle and incompetent may
+grumble vaguely against a capitalism which has been
+built up by their abler brothers. The pretexts are
+light as air. He lives in a free society, and within
+limits can secure his comfort and independence beyond
+a chance of encroachment. But unhappily it does
+not require a justification in reason to bring the
+labour agitator into being. That type, so well
+known in Australia, has already appeared, the unreasoning
+obstructionist, who, armed with a few
+platitudes and an entire absence of foresight, preaches
+his crude gospel to a class which is already vaguely
+unsettled by the intricacies of the economic problem.
+There is almost certain to be an attempt to organise
+labour on Australian lines, and to create a party like
+the Sand Lot agitators in San Francisco, in order to
+do violence to the true economic interests of the land
+on behalf of a prejudice or a theory. Yet I cannot
+think that there is more in the prospect than a
+temporary inconvenience. No labour party can be
+really formidable unless it is based on profound discontents
+and radical grievances; and the annoyances
+of the Johannesburg proletariat are, as compared with
+those of Europe, like crumpled rose-leaves to thorns.
+There is too strong a force of social persistence in
+the city to suffer it ever to become the prey of a
+well-organised gang of revolutionaries; and if such
+a force exists, the experience of Victoria in its
+great railway strike of 1903 would seem to show
+that in the long-run no labour war can succeed
+which tends to a wholesale disorganisation of social
+and industrial life.</p>
+
+<p>But if Johannesburg shows a certain unrest, she also
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span>
+reveals a curious solidarity&mdash;the strength of narrowness
+and exclusion, which is partly natural and due to
+the struggle for self-conscious existence, and partly
+accidental and based on a profound disappointment.
+Her citizens believed that the end of the war would
+begin a golden age of unprecedented prosperity. Money
+was to flow into her coffers, her population to grow by
+many thousands each year, and she herself was to
+stand out before an envious world as a type of virtue
+rewarded. She miscalculated the future, and the facts
+left her aghast. Conservative estimates, a few years
+back, put the value of the gold output in 1902 at
+between 20 and 30 millions: the actual figures during
+the first year of peace show little over 10 millions&mdash;a
+reduction on the output of 1898. Hence the almost
+hysterical concentration of interest on the one great
+industry. Men who in other matters are remarkable
+for their breadth of view, are to be found declaring
+that everything must be made subordinate to mining
+development,&mdash;not in the sense in which the saying is
+true, that the prosperity of the country depends in
+the first instance on the mines, but in the quite indefensible
+sense that any consideration of other
+things, even when there is no conflict between them
+and the mining interest, is a misapplication of energy
+which should go to the greater problem. It is fair
+to argue against a programme of public works which
+might draw native labour from the mines, because,
+unless we cherish the goose, there will be no golden
+eggs to pay for our programmes. But to condemn
+schemes of settlement which are no more a hindrance
+to the gold industry than to the planetary system, is
+to show a nervous blindness to graver questions, which
+is the ugliest product of the present strain and confusion.
+This trait, however, cannot be permanent;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span>
+and we may look to see the gold industry in time,
+when its own crisis is past, become that enlightened
+force in politics which the ability of its leaders and
+the weight of its organisation entitle it to be. For
+the other form of narrowness, which consists in the
+limitation of citizenship, there is ample justification
+in present circumstances. A new city must begin
+by drawing in her skirts and showing herself,
+perhaps unwarrantably, jealous and sensitive. More
+especially a city which has hitherto been rather
+a fortuitous gathering of races than a compact
+community, is right in straining after such compactness,
+even at the cost of a little injustice.
+The only danger lies in the perpetuation of this
+attitude when its justification has gone.</p>
+
+<p>The fault of Johannesburg, to sum up, lies for the
+moment in a certain narrow hardness of view: her
+hope is in the possession of rich elements unknown in
+most new cities; while her greatest danger lies in the
+fact that she cannot yet honestly claim those elements
+as her own. She is apt to judge a question from a
+lower point of view than the question demands&mdash;to
+take up a parochial standpoint in municipal affairs, a
+municipal standpoint in national affairs, a national
+standpoint in imperial questions. In spite of her
+many splendid loyalties, she will find it hard to avoid
+the assertive <i>contra mundum</i> attitude which seems
+inseparable from flourishing colonial cities&mdash;a dogmatism
+natural, but unfortunate. On the other hand,
+her history and her present status give her a chance
+beyond other new cities. She starts on her civic
+career already rich, enterprising, the magnet for the
+first scientific talent of the world. A fortunate development
+might give her a cultivated class, true
+political instincts, and the self-restraint which springs
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>
+from a high civilisation, without at the same time
+impairing that energy which she owes to her colonial
+parentage. The danger is that her ablest element
+may continue alien, treating the city as a caravanserai,
+and returning to Europe as soon as its ambition is
+satisfied. So far the intellect has not been with the
+men who have made the place their home, but, subject
+to a few remarkable exceptions, with the men who
+have never concealed their impatience to get away.
+If she fails to make this class her citizens, then, whatever
+her prosperity, as a city she will remain mediocre.
+Nothing can deprive her of her position as the foremost
+market; but if she is to be also the real capital
+of South Africa, she must absorb the men who are now
+her resident aliens. There are signs, indeed, that the
+process has begun in all seriousness. As she becomes
+a more pleasant dwelling-place, many who find in the
+future of the country the main interest of their lives
+will find in Johannesburg the best field of labour for
+the end they desire. And the growth of such a
+leisured class, who take part in public life for its own
+sake and for no commercial interests, will not only
+import into municipal politics a broader view and a
+healthier spirit, but will do much to secure that community
+of interest between town and country by
+which alone a united South Africa can be created.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XVI.</h3>
+
+<h4>CONSTITUTIONAL QUESTIONS.</h4>
+
+<p>The constitutional requirements of a country are
+never determined solely by its political needs. Some
+account must be taken of its prior history, for theories
+of government are apt to sink deep into the mind
+of a people and to become unconsciously a part of its
+political outlook. No form of education is less conscious
+or more abiding in its effects. It may even happen
+that the fabric which such theories created has been
+deliberately overthrown with the popular consent, but
+none the less the theories are still there in some form
+or other to obtrude themselves in future experiments.
+It is always worth while, therefore, in any reconstruction
+to look at the ideas of government which held
+sway before, whether in the shape of a professed creed
+or in the practical form of institutions. The constitutional
+history of South Africa is not long, and it is
+not complex. In Natal and Cape Colony we possess
+two specimens of ordinary self-governing colonies.
+Natal, which began life as a Crown colony, subject
+to the Governor of the Cape, was granted substantive
+independence by charter in 1856, and in 1893 was given
+representative government. It possesses a nominated
+legislative council of nine members, and an elective
+legislative assembly of thirty-nine members, elected
+on an easy franchise. Cape Colony also began as a
+Crown colony, and followed nearly the same path.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>
+Her legislative council was created in 1850, and by an
+ordinance of this legislature in 1872, ratified by an Act
+of the Imperial Parliament, she obtained full representative
+institutions. Her council and her house of
+assembly are each elected and on the same franchise.
+In these two colonies we have, therefore, types
+of colonial autonomy&mdash;that is to say, an unfettered
+executive and freedom to legislate subject to the consent
+of the Governor and the Crown in Council, a
+limitation which is daily becoming more of a pious
+fiction. In Southern Rhodesia we have a specimen of
+that very modern experiment, government by a commercial
+company. It is a provisional form, and has
+been made to approximate as far as is reasonably
+possible to a Crown colony. The executive power is
+in the hands of the company&rsquo;s officials, subject to an
+indirect control by the Imperial Resident Commissioner,
+the High Commissioner, and ultimately by the
+Crown. There is a legislative council, partly nominated
+by the company and partly elected, and all legislation
+is contingent upon the sanction of the imperial authorities.
+Lastly, there are the native states, the Crown
+colony of Basutoland, and the protectorates of Bechuanaland,
+North-West Rhodesia, and Swaziland, all of
+which are directly or indirectly under the authority of
+the High Commissioner. So far there is no constitutional
+novelty&mdash;Crown colonies advancing to an
+ordinary type of self-government, or remaining, provisionally
+or permanently, under full imperial control.</p>
+
+<p>There remain the late Governments of the Republics,
+which to the student of constitutional forms
+show certain interesting peculiarities.<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> These constitutions
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
+were framed by men who had no tradition<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>
+to fall back upon, if we exclude the Mosaic law, and
+no theories to give effect to&mdash;men who would have preferred
+to do without government, had it been possible,
+but who, once the need became apparent, brought to
+the work much shrewdness and good sense. The Natal
+emigrants in 1838 had established a Volksraad, but
+the chief feature in their scheme was the submission
+of all important matters to a primary public assembly,
+a Homeric gathering of warriors. By the time the
+Sand River and Bloemfontein Conventions were signed
+and the two republics became independent, the people
+were scattered over a wide expanse of country, and
+some form of representation was inevitable. At the
+same time, it had become necessary to provide for a
+military organisation coextensive with the civil. In
+the Transvaal transient republics had arisen and departed,
+like the changes in a kaleidoscope. Around
+both states there was a native population, actively
+hostile and potentially dangerous. Some central military
+and civil authority was needed to keep the
+country from anarchy. But if the farmers were
+without political theories, they had a very vigorous
+sense of personal independence; so the doctrinal basis
+of the new constitution lay in the axiom that one
+burgher in the State is as good as another, and that
+the people are the final repository of power. In this at
+least they were democratic, though from other traits
+of democracy they have ever held aloof.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Constitutie</i> of the Orange Free State was rigid&mdash;that
+is, it could be altered only by methods different
+from those of ordinary legislation: in the Transvaal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>
+<i>Grondwet</i>, on the other hand, there was no provision
+for change at all, and reforms, when necessary, were
+made in the ordinary legislative manner. The <i>Constitutie</i>
+created one supreme legislature, the Volksraad,
+elected by the qualified white population. The President
+was elected by the whole people, though the
+Volksraad, like the Roman consuls, reserved the power
+to make nominations, which were generally accepted.
+The Volksraad had not only supreme legislative power,
+but, while formally independent of the President and
+the executive, it could reverse any executive Act,
+except the exercise of the President&rsquo;s right of pardon
+and the declaration of martial law. It was limited
+only by its own charter, which forbade it to restrict
+the right of public meeting and petition (one of the
+few Bill of Rights elements in this constitution),
+and bound it to promote and support the Dutch
+Reformed Church. The Transvaal <i>Grondwet</i> began by
+making the Dutch Reformed Church an established
+national Church (a provision repealed later), and declaring
+that &ldquo;the people will not tolerate any equality
+between coloured and white inhabitants in Church or
+State.&rdquo; No man was eligible for a seat in the Volksraad
+unless he was a member of a Protestant Church.<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a>
+In the Transvaal, as in the Orange Free State, the
+Volksraad was the supreme legislative authority, but
+when any law was proposed the people were given the
+opportunity of expressing their opinion in a mild form
+of the referendum. The President was elected by
+the whole people and acted as chief of the executive,
+though responsible to the Volksraad, which could dismiss
+him or cancel his appointments. He could sit
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>
+and speak in the Volksraad, but had no vote. The
+chief military authority was the Commandant General,
+who was elected by all the burghers, and under him
+there was a long hierarchy of district commandants
+and field-cornets. The local administrative officer for
+civil matters was the landdrost or district magistrate.
+It is unnecessary to consider the Second Volksraad,
+which was an ineffective advisory body elected on a
+wider franchise, a mere sop to the Cerberus whose
+hundred tongues were clamouring for representation.
+But there was one curious development of considerable
+historic interest. In cases of urgency the Volksraad
+could pass laws without reference to the people at
+large, but such an enactment was called a resolution
+(<i>besluit</i>) as contrasted with a law (<i>wet</i>), and was
+supposed to have only a provisional force. But the
+habit grew of calling most matters &ldquo;specially urgent,&rdquo;
+and allowing the old popular referendum to fall into
+desuetude.</p>
+
+<p>The common feature of both constitutions was
+the immense nominal powers of the legislatures.
+Nominally they had the right to make all appointments,
+to veto the President&rsquo;s action, and to say
+the last word in all questions of revenue and expenditure.
+But certain facts wrought against this
+legislative supremacy. The members came from
+districts widely apart, and there was no serious
+attempt to form groups or parties; the President
+could sit and speak in the Volksraad, and he might
+be elected as often as he could persuade the people
+to elect him. The way was paved for the tyranny
+of a strong man. In the Orange Free State, that
+country of mild prosperity and simple problems, the
+system worked admirably; but in the Transvaal,
+when burning questions arose, the republican methods
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span>
+for all serious purposes broke down, and were replaced
+by a dictatorship. There remain, however, certain
+doctrines from the old <i>régime</i> which will have to be
+reckoned with under the new. The supremacy of the
+legislature is not one, for no Boer cared much for the
+dogma, and Mr Kruger ruled on the simple maxim,
+&ldquo;L&rsquo;état c&rsquo;est moi.&rdquo; But the democratic principle of
+equality among citizens is one cherished belief, and
+another is the absolute disqualification of all coloured
+races.<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> The Boer is not a parliamentarian in the
+ordinary sense, and he did not grieve when his
+Volksraad was slighted and made impotent; but he
+likes his representative to go to Pretoria, as a sort
+of tribute to his importance, and, if he is to vote,
+he demands to vote on an equal basis with all. He
+was attached to his local administration with its
+landdrost system, and any change which bore no relation
+to the old plan might begin by confusing and
+end by souring him.</p>
+
+<p>We have therefore to face two existing constitutional
+traditions&mdash;among the British from the Cape or Natal
+or over-seas, the old love of colonial self-government;
+among the Boers, at least in the Transvaal, a kind of
+ingenuous republican independence, quite consistent
+with a patient tolerance of absolutism, but not so easy
+to adapt to the gradations of our representative system.
+Hence in many ways the Boer is far more likely
+to remain patient for years under a Crown colony
+Government than the English or colonial new-comer.
+He does not particularly want to vote or interfere in
+administration, so long as he has no personal grievance;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span>
+but it might annoy him to see the franchise denied to
+him and given to his cousin who was a little richer or
+better educated, when he remembered the old <i>Grondwet</i>
+doctrines of equality, and it would certainly exasperate
+him to learn that any native had been
+granted a civic status beyond him.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">Such being the constitutional history, we may turn
+to the present. The term Crown colony is used so
+loosely that very few of its many critics could define
+the peculiar features of this form of government.
+&ldquo;One of the greatest of all evils,&rdquo; wrote Lord
+Durham in the famous Report which has become
+the charter of colonial policy, &ldquo;arising from this
+system of irresponsible government, was the mystery
+in which the motives and actual purposes of their
+rulers were hid from the colonists themselves. The
+most important business of government was carried
+on, not in open discussions or public acts, but in
+a secret correspondence between the Governor and
+the Secretary of State.&rdquo; This feature, more than
+any other, tends to dissatisfaction. The Crown
+colony system is necessarily a secret one. The
+newspapers, till blue-books are issued, are informed
+only as much or as little as the authorities may
+think good for them; and the natural critics of all
+administration have the somewhat barren pleasure of
+finding fault with a policy after it has become a fact.
+There is no safety-valve for the escape of grievances,
+no official channel even for sound local advice. It is
+not to be wondered at, therefore, if it seems an intolerable
+burden to men full of anxiety about the methods
+by which they are governed.</p>
+
+<p>The Crown colony system is not new to Africa. It
+existed for years in the Cape and Natal; it still exists
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span>
+in its most rigid form over native states, and at its
+worst it does not spurn public opinion in the fashion
+of the Kruger <i>régime</i>&mdash;it simply neglects it. The
+name is really a misnomer, for it is no part of the
+English colonial system. The American Revolution is
+sometimes described as the revolt of an English people
+from Crown colony government, but in those days the
+thing was not in existence. It is fundamentally the
+method invented to govern a race which is incapable
+of free representative institutions, or to tide over a
+temporary difficulty. The Governor is absolute, subject
+to the conditions of his appointment and the
+instructions accompanying his letters-patent. He
+may be assisted by a council, but it is his privilege,
+on reasons shown, to override his council. He is the
+sole local fountain of executive and legislative power.
+But if he is absolute in one sense, he is strictly tied in
+another. The methods of his administration are subject
+to certain regulations issued by the Colonial
+Office. The Secretary of State must approve his
+appointments, and all important administrative acts,
+as well as all legislation. Further, in serious questions
+the Home Government exercises a general oversight
+of policy before the event, and the Governor in
+such matters is merely the mouthpiece of the Cabinet.
+It is in itself a rational system, and works well under
+certain conditions. In a serious crisis, when large
+imperial issues are involved, and when local policy is
+but a branch of a wider policy, it is highly important
+that this day-to-day supervision should exist; and in
+a case where speed is essential, Crown colony methods,
+though slow enough in all conscience, are rapidity
+itself compared with the cumbrous machinery of
+representative government.</p>
+
+<p>The necessity of treating the Transvaal and the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span>
+Orange River Colony temporarily as Crown colonies
+was beyond argument. Reconstruction began in the
+midst of war, when the material of self-government
+was wanting. It goes on amidst unsettled and dimly
+understood conditions, where certain facts of policy
+stand out in a strong light and all else is shadow.
+It involves many financial transactions in which the
+Home Government is deeply interested; and it is
+natural that a close administrative connection should
+be thought desirable. It comes at the end of a costly
+war, and it is right that England should have a direct
+say in securing herself against its repetition. The
+racial problem is still too delicate to submit to the
+arbitrament of popular bodies; and if it were settled
+out of hand there might remain an abiding cause of
+discontent. The time is not ripe for self-government,
+the country has not yet found herself, having but
+barely awakened from the torpor of war and begun to
+set her house in order. Again, there are factors to be
+borne in mind in re-creating the new colonies which
+extend far beyond their borders. It is impossible
+to imagine that due consideration could be given to
+them by the ablest elective body in the world, called
+together in the present ferment. Above all, what is
+to be done must be done quickly. The wants of the
+hour are too urgent for delays. There must be some
+authority, trusted by the British Cabinet, capable of
+determining the needs of the situation, and giving
+summary effect to his decision.</p>
+
+<p>On this all thinking men in the new colonies are
+agreed. I do not suppose that any of the more
+serious critics of the expedient would be prepared to
+propose and defend an alternative. But irritation
+remains when reason has done its best, and it is not
+hard to see the causes. One is the natural disinclination
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span>
+of Englishmen to be ruled from above, a repulsion
+which they feel even when arguing in its favour.
+Another is the secrecy of Crown colony government,
+to which I have already referred. It is painful to find
+matters of vital importance to yourself decided without
+your knowledge, even when you have the fullest
+confidence in the deciding power. There is also,
+perhaps, a little distrust still left in South Africa of
+the British Government,&mdash;not of particular Ministers,
+but of the vague entity behind them&mdash;a distrust
+which has had in the past such ample justification
+that it is hard to blame it. The colonial mind, too, is
+averse to English officialdom, even when represented
+by the several highly competent men who have shared
+in the present administration. Red-tape, which in its
+place is most necessary and desirable, seems to lurk in
+the offices of men who are in reality trying hard to
+deal with facts in the simplest way. A certain
+amount of formal officialdom is necessary in all
+government. There must be people to keep an office
+in order, to make a fetich of etiquette, to insist on a
+stereotyped procedure, and to see the world dimly
+through a mist of &ldquo;previous papers.&rdquo; It is a useful,
+but not very valuable, type of man, and we cannot
+wonder that a South African, who imagines that
+such a one has, what he rarely has, an influence in
+grave decisions, should view with distrust the form
+of government which permits him. It is a mistake,
+but one based on an honest instinct.</p>
+
+<p>Self-government is the goal to which all things
+hasten, and critics of the present administration check
+their complaints at the thought of that beneficent
+day. Meanwhile it is our business to set things in
+order so that the chosen of the people, when they
+enter into their inheritance, may find it swept and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span>
+garnished. Representative institutions should not
+spring full grown from an Order in Council, like
+Athene from the brain of Zeus: if they do, there
+is apt to be a painful crudeness about their early
+history. The way should be prepared by gentle
+means, for, after all, it is a country in which the
+bulk of the residents have had no experience of
+governing themselves. The experiment has so far
+been tried in two ways. The municipalities represent
+the highest level of intelligence and political
+training; in municipal affairs, therefore, it is safe to
+begin at once with representation. The first town
+councils were for all practical purposes Government
+departments, nominated by Government and assisted
+on their difficult career by Government supervision.
+But a nominated town council is an anomaly even
+within a Crown colony, since a town council is not
+concerned with high politics but only with the administration
+of the area in which its citizens choose
+to dwell, and any owner of property has a right to a
+voice in determining the ways in which his property
+shall be safeguarded. The basis of any municipal
+franchise is the payment of rates, which imply the
+ownership of property; and questions of race, loyalty,
+even of education, have no logical place in what is
+simply a practical union for the protection of proprietary
+interests and the care of the amenities of
+civilised life. The question of elective municipalities
+is therefore a simple one, and as soon as a municipal
+law could be put together, the system was inaugurated.
+This is not the place to examine the type of municipal
+franchise adopted in the Transvaal, which is a
+skilful compendium of various colonial precedents.
+But on one matter, the coloured and alien vote, there
+was manifested a vigorous tendency to conservatism
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>
+and exclusion. As I have said, this is a province
+where racial distinctions have no logical place. If a
+black man is a ratepayer he has the citizen&rsquo;s right to
+vote. Nor can we on purely rational grounds confine
+this franchise to British subjects. But the country
+thought differently. As the municipal was her only
+form of representation, political considerations crept
+in unawares, and the result, while logically indefensible,
+has a certain practical justification. For in
+a time of reconstruction a community is apt rather
+to narrow than enlarge its boundaries, feeling above
+all things the need of a compact front against the
+unknown. In time, no doubt, the true theory of
+municipal franchise will reassert itself, and if, when
+the time comes, a constructive policy towards the
+subject races has also come into being, the delay will
+have been not in vain.</p>
+
+<p>A more important step towards self-government
+was the creation of nominated legislative councils for
+both colonies, which held their first meetings in the
+early part of 1903. In the Transvaal there were
+sixteen official members representing the different
+Government departments, and fourteen non-official
+members selected from representative Englishmen and
+Boers in the country. In the Orange River Colony
+there were six official members and four non-official.
+Some of the new measures which concerned more
+deeply the people of the colonies were kept back on
+purpose for the opinion of the new councils. Such
+were the new gold and diamond laws, the municipal
+franchise law, and the ordinances governing the disposal
+of town lands. So far the expedient has
+promised well; an outlet has been created for public
+opinion, though for the present such opinion cannot
+carry with it practical force; and the procedure of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>
+Government has ceased to be a state secret, and is
+patent to any one who has the curiosity or the
+patience to attend the council&rsquo;s debates. It is interesting
+to observe how the unofficial members already
+appear in a quasi-representative capacity, and are
+beginning to attach themselves to particular districts,
+for which, so far as airing grievances and obtaining
+information go, they perform most of the duties of
+an elected member. There is no reason why such
+members should not be elected instead of nominated,
+and in this way provide a trial for the form of franchise
+on which autonomy is to be based. There are
+many obvious difficulties in any franchise for the new
+colonies, and it would be well for such difficulties
+to be realised and faced while the whole matter is
+still mainly academic, and errors are not yet attended
+with practical disaster.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">The franchise for the new colonies is the constitutional
+problem which is of the most immediate
+importance. It will not be wise to delay the era
+of self-government long, for between the most elastic
+Crown colony and the narrowest free colony there
+is an inseparable gulf, and though it may be said
+justly that with an elective legislature the colonies
+have something very like freedom, the one thing
+needful will still be lacking. It is not enough to
+put the oars into their hands; we must cut the
+painter before they are truly free. There is one
+postulate in all franchise discussions which is likely
+to be vigorously attacked. The franchise must be
+based in the first instance upon the principle of
+giving adequate representation to all districts and
+every interest; but, once this has been recognised, the
+second principle appears&mdash;of providing for the supremacy
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span>
+of the British population. That saying of Dogberry&rsquo;s,
+&ldquo;An two men ride of a horse, one must ride
+behind,&rdquo; is a primary law not only of equitation but
+of politics in the treatment of a conquered country.
+For conquered it is, and there is little use disguising
+it: we have not been fighting for the love of it or for
+fine sentiment, but to conquer the land and give our
+people the mastery. The last word in all matters
+must rest with us&mdash;that is, with the people of British
+blood and British sympathies. Both men must be
+on the horse, or, apart from parable, each race must
+have fair and ample representation. To deny this
+would be to sin against sound policy. But not
+to take measures to see that our own race has
+the casting vote is to be guilty of the commonest
+folly. &ldquo;An two men ride of a horse, one must ride
+behind.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Whoever denies this principle may spare himself the
+trouble of reading further, for it is proposed to treat
+it as axiomatic. The first type of franchise need not
+be permanent: a day may come when it will be needless
+to consider the distinction of Dutch and British.
+But as it was right and politic on the conclusion of
+war to disarm our opponents, so it is right and politic
+in the first franchise to put no weapon of offence
+into their hands. The primary adjustment of the
+franchise and the primary distribution of seats must
+be made with this clear end in view&mdash;to secure a
+working majority for the British people. It is obvious
+that the words &ldquo;British population&rdquo; are vague, and
+include many odd forms of nationality, but the thing
+itself is simple, the class whose interests and sentiment
+are on the British side, who seek progress on
+British lines. It does not follow that the majority of
+the Dutch will go into opposition, but it is ordinary
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span>
+prudence to keep on the safe side. Such a policy
+involves no distrust of the Dutch population, but is
+the common duty of those who for a certain period
+must, as conquerors, take the initiative in administration,
+and, as bearing the responsibility, preserve
+an adequate means of control.</p>
+
+<p>The terms of the franchise are a more difficult
+matter. In Cape Colony citizenship and a low
+property qualification are the chief conditions. In
+Southern Rhodesia, whose franchise law is an especially
+clear and sensible code, an oath of loyalty is
+accepted in lieu of technical citizenship, and an
+easy educational test is demanded&mdash;the ability of
+a voter to sign his name and write his address and
+occupation. In Natal there is a sharp distinction
+drawn between Europeans and all others. To them
+the only tests are citizenship, and the ownership or
+occupation of property of a certain value, or the
+receipt of a certain amount of income. The native
+is practically disqualified by a law denying the
+franchise to any person subject to special courts or
+special laws, and though a means of escape is provided,
+the conditions are too complex even for more
+intelligent minds than the native. It is an ingenious
+but not wholly satisfactory device. Asiatics are
+excluded by the law which denies votes to natives,
+or descendants in the male line of natives, of any
+country which does not enjoy the blessings of representative
+government; and though in their case also
+there is a way of escape, it is almost equally difficult.
+The root distinction between types of franchise lies
+in the method employed to exclude an undesirable
+class, whether a direct one, by disqualifying in so
+many words, or an indirect, by setting one standard of
+qualification for all, to which, as a matter of fact, the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span>
+undesirable class cannot attain. The balance of argument
+is, on the whole, on the side of the second
+method, which has been adopted in Cape Colony and
+Rhodesia, though, perhaps, with too low a standard.
+But the first method, if followed more frankly than in
+Natal, has something to be said for it. There is no
+reason why the better class of Indians should not vote,
+if their race is considered fit to mix on equal terms
+with English society elsewhere; but to my mind
+there is a very good reason why the native should
+not vote&mdash;at least, not for the present. The easy
+way of securing this result is the old method of the
+Transvaal <i>Grondwet</i>, which said shortly, &ldquo;There shall
+be no equality between black and white.&rdquo; It is the
+way, too, which, under the Conditions of Surrender,
+would have to be adopted in any trial franchise put
+into force before self-government. I am not sure
+whether it is not the most philosophic as well as the
+simplest way, for it denies the native the franchise not
+for a lack of property or educational qualification, but
+for radical mental dissimilarity. In any case it is a
+matter which must be left for the people of the
+colony to settle for themselves. But for all others,
+while the property basis of the franchise should be
+low, there are grounds for thinking that a reasonably
+high educational test should be added. The
+lower type of European and the back-veld Dutchman
+have in their present state no equitable right
+to the decision, which the franchise gives, on matters
+which they are unable to come within a measurable
+distance of understanding. The fact that the fool
+may have a vote at home is no reason for exalting
+him to the same level in a country which is not
+handicapped by a constitutional history. Some form
+of British citizenship, obtainable by a short and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span>
+simple method, must also be demanded if the land
+is to remain a British colony.</p>
+
+<p>Once the franchise has been determined there remains
+the division of constituencies. The axiom has
+already been explained which appears to govern this
+question. But in the absence of anything approaching
+correct census returns it is difficult to suggest,
+even tentatively, a distribution of seats. The fairest
+way to secure the representation of all interests seems
+to be to divide constituencies into three types. First,
+there are the large towns, which for the present, to
+take the Transvaal, may be limited to Johannesburg
+and Pretoria. These would be given members according
+to their population. Second, come groups of country
+burghs, such groups as the Northern Burghs, with
+Nylstroom, Warm Baths, Piet Potgieter&rsquo;s Rust, and
+Pietersburg; and the Eastern Burghs, with Middelburg
+and Belfast, Lydenburg and Barberton. Here,
+too, members would be allotted according to population,
+though the number of voters required to form a
+constituency should be fewer. Lastly, there would
+be the country districts, substantially the present
+fourteen magisterial divisions, and there the numbers
+of a constituency would be still smaller. That it is
+fair to differentiate in favour of the counties against
+the burghs, and in favour of the burghs against the
+large towns, will appear on a brief consideration. The
+interests of the different constituencies in a city, at
+least in a new city, are practically identical. In the
+country burghs the interests vary, but still within
+narrow limits. In the counties, on the other hand,
+there is often a very wide variation. The dwellers in
+Barberton have wholly different problems and grievances
+from the dwellers in Bloemhof or Standerton.
+But while this principle is right, the former axiom
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
+must be kept in mind, that, provided fair representation
+is granted to all, the constituencies must be so
+arranged as to ensure British predominance. Certain
+counties will, I believe, be on the whole British in time&mdash;Bloemhof,
+Marico, Zoutpansberg, possibly Waterberg,
+possibly Lydenburg, undoubtedly Barberton.
+The burghs, too, will yield on the whole a British
+voting population. In all likelihood, therefore, our
+purpose will be secured by the division of constituencies
+which I have suggested, even allowing for a
+differentiation in favour of the rural districts. Figures
+are still impossible in the absence of a census,
+but on the roughest estimate there may be in the
+Transvaal at the present moment a Boer population
+of 100,000, with a voting proportion of 30,000, and
+a British population of perhaps 150,000, with a voting
+proportion of 50,000 or upwards. In the Orange
+River Colony before the war the voters&rsquo; roll showed
+just over 17,000, and if we put the vote on an enlarged
+franchise at 20,000, we may be near the mark.
+The position of the latter colony will not change
+greatly in the next decade, but the Transvaal may
+easily in a few years show a million inhabitants and
+more. With a population thus constantly increasing
+and liable to great local fluctuations, redistribution
+may soon become a vexed question and a source of
+political chicanery. It would be well if the endless
+friction which attends redistribution courts and commissions
+could be saved by some automatic system
+under which sudden local inequalities could be speedily
+and finally adjusted.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">The greatest constitutional calamity which could
+befall South Africa would be for the Dutch in the
+new colonies to go as a race into opposition. I have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span>
+said that they are not born parliamentarians, and
+that, to begin with at least, they will be a little
+strange to the forms and methods of English representative
+government. But they are a strong and
+serious people, and if they desire, as a race, to form
+an opposition, they will learn the tactics of a parliament
+as readily as their kinsmen have done in the
+Cape. It will be difficult to form out of so practical
+and stable a folk such an opposition as the Nationalist
+party in Ireland; but if they have real grievances
+to fight for, it is conceivable that the Dutch people
+might be organised into as solid a voting machine as
+the Irish peasantry under the control of the Land
+League and the Church. Attempts will doubtless be
+made to bring this about. Certain institutions will
+spare no pains to secure so promising a recruit in
+their policy of emphasising every feature in the South
+African situation which tends to disunion. On the
+other hand, certain of the natural leaders of the
+Dutch people, who have acquired the spurious race-hatred
+which intriguers and adventurers have built up
+during the past twenty years, in a desperately discreet
+and orthodox manner may work to the same
+end. But fortunately there are signs that the party
+division, when it comes, will be lateral and not
+vertical. It is a phenomenon often observed in a long
+war, that a day of apathy sets in, differences arise
+in a party, and one section begins to dislike the other
+far more than it hates the common enemy. This
+phenomenon, which in war spells disaster, is salutary
+enough in civil politics. In both races there are signs
+of divisions, and on each side there is a party unconsciously
+drawing nearer to their old opponents. The
+majority of the Dutch have little rancour, except
+against each other; to many the Bond is as much an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>
+object of suspicion as, let us say, Mr Chamberlain.
+The old nebulous Pan-Afrikander dreams were in no
+way popular with the Transvaal Boer, who would
+have been nearly as much annoyed at being harassed
+with an Afrikander federation as at being annexed
+to Natal. Besides, he is not a good party man, being
+too sincere an individualist. Intrigue of the carpet-bag
+and secret-league variety he will never shine in,
+and he does not desire to, though apt enough at a
+kind of rustic diplomacy. There is, further, a party
+ready made for him. He is frankly anti-Johannesburg,
+a pure agrarian. Already the anomalous labour
+party of the Rand are making overtures to him, and
+with loud declamations on his merits strive to attract
+his sympathies. On certain matters he may join
+them, but it will be an odd union, and not a long one.
+Town and country will never long remain in conjunction,
+and there are few items, indeed, of a labour
+programme to which he would subscribe.</p>
+
+<p>It is difficult to draw with any confidence the
+political horoscope of the new colonies. Certain
+eternal antitheses will exist,&mdash;Capital and Labour,
+Rand and Veld, Progress and the staunchest of
+staunch Conservatisms,&mdash;but none of them seem
+likely to coalesce so as to form any permanent division
+of parties. It is as easy to imagine Rand capitalists
+and country Dutch united on certain questions as
+Boer and Labour. Possibly the old distinction of
+Liberal and Tory in some form or other will appear
+in the end. It is said that the colonies are aggressively
+Liberal; but these are different from other
+colonies, and the groundwork of Conservatism already
+exists. We have a plutocracy and a landed aristocracy.
+We have also in the legal element a class,
+in its South African form, peculiarly tenacious of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span>
+the letter of the law. We have an established kirk
+in all but name, and a racial tradition of resistance
+to novelty. With the growth of a rich and leisured
+population, and of social grades and conventions,
+there will come a time when politics may well be
+divided between those who are satisfied with things
+as they are, and those who hunger for things as
+they cannot be&mdash;with, of course, a sprinkling of
+plain men who do their work without theories. We
+shall have the doctrinaire idealist, doubtless, to experiment
+on the labour and native questions; and
+in place of having politics based on interests, we
+may have them based in name and reality on creeds
+and dogmas, which is what English constitutionalism
+desires. All such developments are just and normal,
+and in any one the land may find political stability.</p>
+
+<p>There is one contingency alone which must be
+regarded with the greatest dread&mdash;the growth of
+a South African party, which is South African because
+anti-British. The war raised colonial loyalty
+to a height; but such loyalty is like a rocket, which
+may speedily expire in the void in a blaze of brightness,
+or may kindle a steady flame if the material
+be there. We must remember that we have in the
+Dutch a large population to which the British tie
+means nothing; a large and important class, in the
+cosmopolitan financiers, who may be covertly hostile
+to British interests; and even in some of the most
+sterling and public-spirited citizens men who, if the
+Dutch Government had allowed them, would have
+surrendered their nationality and become citizens of
+the republics. South African loyalty, splendid as it
+is, is rather fidelity to British traditions than to
+that overt link which constitutes empire. You will,
+indeed, hear the true theory of colonial policy well
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span>
+stated and strongly defended; but it must not be
+forgotten that in South Africa it is still somewhat
+of an exotic plant, and wants careful tending before
+it can come to maturity. Unadvised action on our
+part may nip the growth, and give a chance for
+a party which might declare, to adopt the words of
+the old loyalists of Lower Canada, that it was
+determined to be South African even at the cost
+of ceasing to be British. A too long or too straitly
+ordered tutelage might do it, or a harsh dictation
+on some local question of vital interest, or the continuance
+of the old calumnies about the Rand, the
+old vulgar sneer at the colonial-born. It is well to
+remember that while the land is a Crown colony it
+is one only in name, and that all the tact and discretion
+which we use in dealing with self-governing
+colonies should be used in this case also.</p>
+
+<p>Such a party may arise, but there is no reason in
+the nature of things for its existence. South African
+and British are not opposites. As I understand the
+theory of colonial government, England stands towards
+her colonies as a parent who starts his sons in the
+world, wishing them all prosperity; and though in
+after-years he may exercise the parental right of
+giving advice, he will not attempt to coerce the
+action of those who have come to years of maturity.
+The tie is strongest when it is not of the letter but
+of the spirit. At the same time it is well to preserve
+certain outward and visible signs of descent,&mdash;well
+for the fatherland, better for the colonies, who
+draw from that fatherland their social and political
+traditions and their spiritual sustenance. At the
+moment South Africa is in a transition stage. Her
+public opinion is scarcely formed on any subject;
+she is full of vague aspirations, uneasy yearnings,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span>
+and half-fledged hopes. She will develop either into
+the staunchest of allies in any imperial federation,
+or the most recalcitrant and isolated of colonies.
+She has enough and to spare of good men who
+desire nothing more than that the African nation,
+when it comes, should be a British people, and if
+she is trusted whole-heartedly, she will not betray
+the trust. She will even accept advice and reproof
+in proper cases, for, unless we drive her to ingratitude,
+she is not ungrateful for the blood and treasure
+which Britain has spent on her making. But she
+is like a young well-bred colt, whose mouth may be
+easily spoiled by over-bitting, and whose temper will
+be ruined by the bad hands or too hasty temper of
+its trainer.</p>
+
+<p>Two important constitutional questions remain.
+One is the great policy of Federation, which looms
+as a background behind all sporadic constitutional
+forms. The second concerns that part of the imperial
+forces which is to be stationed in South
+Africa&mdash;a matter which is not only an army question
+but one deeply affecting colonial interests. To
+these the two succeeding chapters are devoted.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a>
+Mr Bryce, in his &lsquo;Studies in History and Jurisprudence,&rsquo; vol. i.
+pp. 430-467, has a valuable examination of the old Transvaal and Orange
+River Colony constitutions.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a>
+Stray dogmas from the French Revolution had undoubtedly some
+share in the ferment preceding the Great Trek, but I cannot think that
+the voortrekkers carried any such baggage with them to the wilderness.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a>
+The original <i>Grondwet</i> declared that no Roman Catholic Church, nor
+any Protestant Church which did not teach the Heidelberg Catechism,
+should be admitted within the Republic.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a>
+There was no reason <em>in law</em> under the old Orange Free State Government
+why a native should not have the municipal franchise through
+ownership, and an Asiatic through occupation of town property. But in
+practice&mdash;a practice deduced from the spirit of the <i>Constitutie</i>&mdash;no such
+voters were registered.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XVII.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE POLICY OF FEDERATION.</h4>
+
+<p>No South African problem is more long-descended
+than the question of Federation. It was a dream of
+Sir George Grey&rsquo;s in the mid-century, and it was a
+central feature in the policy of Sir Bartle Frere&mdash;that
+policy which, after twenty years of obscuration, is at
+last seen in its true and beneficent light. Nor was it
+held only by English governors. Local statesmen in
+Cape Colony saw in it a panacea for the endless
+frontier difficulties which tried their patience and
+their talents. The ultra-independent colonist, in
+whose ears &ldquo;Africa for the Afrikanders&rdquo; was beginning
+to ring, seized upon it as a lever towards a more
+complete autonomy. Men like Mr Rhodes, to whom
+Africa was an empire and its people one potential
+nation, looked on it as the first step towards this
+larger destiny. Every student of political history
+for the last fifty years, considering the physical situation
+of the different states and the absence of any
+final dividing line between them, confidently anticipated
+for South Africa, and under more favourable
+conditions, the development which Australia has
+already reached. But the movement shipwrecked
+on the northern republics. Old grievances and
+jealousies set the Transvaal and the Orange Free
+State in arms against the prospect, and, since the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span>
+essence of federation is full mutual consent, the project
+failed at the first hint of serious opposition. Now
+all things are changed. The social and constitutional
+difficulties which would obviously arise from the
+inclusion of independent or all but independent
+states in a federation of colonies have disappeared
+with the independent states themselves. Now at
+last all South Africa save the Portuguese and German
+seaboards is under one flag.</p>
+
+<p>The chief barriers have gone, but the need for
+federation is as insistent as ever. A common flag
+is a strong tie, but it does not in practice prevent
+many local jealousies and petty oppositions. Disunion
+is only justifiable among colonies of equal standing
+when there is some insuperable physical barrier
+between them or some radical disparity of interests.
+Providence is so clearly on the side of the larger
+social battalions, that an isolated state, though
+within a colonial system, is at a disadvantage even in
+matters concerning its own interests. The nationalism
+which rejoices in local distinctions, however
+recent in origin, is admirable enough in its way,
+and ought to be preserved; therefore the complete
+merging of several units in one is always to be
+regretted, even when justified by grave needs. The
+new state will never or not for a long time acquire
+the consistency and proud self-consciousness of the
+destroyed units. But federation shows another and
+a better way. The parts are maintained in full
+national existence, but in so far as their interests
+transcend their own boundaries they are united in
+one larger state. There is another advantage, often
+pointed out by American writers on the subject,
+which concerns a country like South Africa, whose
+boundaries cannot yet be said to be finally delimited.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</a></span>
+North of the Zambesi there is a vast vague region,
+partly under the High Commissioner, partly included
+in British Central Africa, which in time will become
+separate colonies, with interests wholly different from
+the states of the south. To add a new tract and
+a novel population to a state is always a difficult
+matter, for the existing <i>régime</i> may be most unsuited
+for such extension. But it is easy to include a new
+colony in a federation. In Mr Bryce&rsquo;s words, federation
+&ldquo;permits an expansion, whose extension and
+whose rate and manner of progress cannot be foreseen,
+to proceed with more variety of methods, more
+adaptation of laws and administration to the circumstances
+of each part of the territory, and altogether
+in a more truly natural and spontaneous way than
+can be expected under a centralised government.
+Thus the special needs of a new <i>régime</i> are met by
+the inhabitants in the way they find best; its special
+evils are met by special remedies, perhaps more drastic
+than an old country demands, perhaps more lax than
+an old country would tolerate; while at the same
+time the spirit of self-reliance among those who
+build up these new communities is stimulated and
+respected.&rdquo;<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
+
+<p>The need for federation in the case of South Africa
+is made greater by the fact that there are one or two
+burning questions common to all her states which
+cannot be satisfactorily settled save by joint action.
+Foremost stands the native problem. If there is not
+some sort of geographical continuity of policy in the
+treatment of natives, all our efforts will be unavailing.
+The natives of South Africa may be regarded, among
+other things, as a great industrial reserve; and if the
+policy outlined in another chapter is to be followed,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</a></span>
+different labour laws and different methods of taxation
+may work incalculable harm. If extravagant
+inducements to work are held out in the Transvaal,
+it will not be long before the labour market is ruined
+elsewhere. If an improvident system of taxation
+exists in Natal, it may unsettle and discontent other
+native populations, since it is highly probable that in
+the future natives will be less tied to localities, and
+will move through the whole country in search of
+work. The mining authorities have long recognised
+the necessity of a single policy, as is shown by such
+institutions as the Chamber of Mines and the Native
+Labour Association; and it would be odd if in political
+questions, where the need is equally urgent, the same
+truth should be neglected. In connection with natives
+the control of the sale of intoxicants is another matter
+of South African importance. It is a matter on which
+South Africa is now practically at one; but there are
+limits to the prescience of local legislation and local
+officials, and it may easily happen that an inadequate
+law inadequately administered in one colony may
+undo most of the good that an energetic administration
+is attempting in another. If identity of policy,
+again, is indispensable in relation to the subject races,
+the same identity is most desirable in those inter-racial
+questions between white men which will long
+have their place in South African politics. An unwise
+treatment of the Dutch population in the Cape will
+infallibly react on the new colonies. Any one who
+knows the way in which Cape precedents in this
+connection are quoted in the Transvaal, just as
+Transvaal precedents were quoted before the war
+in the Cape, will recognise the difficulty which the
+present disunion creates. In educational matters,
+such as the proportion of time devoted to the teaching
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</a></span>
+of the Dutch language, while every colony must
+necessarily decide for itself, there is great need of
+one controlling authority to supervise and direct.
+There is, again, the question of permit law and the
+exclusion of undesirables, and the kindred matter
+of the position of the imperial forces. A lax permit
+law in one colony nullifies all the strictness of its
+neighbours. Army questions&mdash;whatever the future
+position of the South African force&mdash;will always have
+an intercolonial significance, for the different troops
+are under one commander-in-chief, they will meet for
+training and man&oelig;uvres, and they are part of one
+general scheme of imperial defence. In some questions
+an attempt at co-operation has already been made,&mdash;in
+railway conferences and customs unions,&mdash;but it
+is obviously a clumsy method which proceeds from
+conference agreements to ratification by the several
+legislatures; and many important and difficult questions
+will go on arising from day to day which
+will be decided in quite different ways by local
+authorities, to the confusion of all and the increase
+of unnecessary distinctions. Lastly, there are a number
+of lesser matters, of which veterinary and game
+regulations may be taken as the type, whose treatment,
+to be satisfactory, must be governed by a
+common principle and in the hands of a common
+executive.</p>
+
+<p>Such are a few of the practical reasons for federation.
+There is a deeper reason based on the future
+of our colonial system. South Africa at the present
+moment is deeply cleft by gulfs of race, fiscal policy,
+imperial attachment. There will always be within
+her bounds a party, not perhaps a very important
+or very intelligent party, made up of those to whom
+the British tie is galling and the tradition of kinship
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</a></span>
+mere foolishness. If the present particularism is
+allowed to remain unreformed, it may easily happen
+that in this colony or that some turn of the political
+wheel may give such a party an authoritative voice,
+and the result may be the beginning of endless
+misunderstandings, and in the end the creation of
+an impassable gulf. It is because South Africa as
+a whole is so unswerving in her loyalty that it is
+wise to create some united authority representing the
+whole land, and looking at this great question from
+a high standpoint, which can provide against the
+parochialism of a party and the accidental caprice of
+a state. This feeling is strong among the English
+inhabitants of the new colonies, and is, I believe,
+destined to grow in width and strength throughout
+the country, when the fever of reconstruction is at
+an end and South Africa has leisure to meditate on
+her political future.</p>
+
+<p>If we examine present conditions we can discern,
+to borrow the common metaphor of writers on federation,
+both centripetal and centrifugal tendencies. To
+begin with, the constitutional framework exists. The
+head of a federation is already at hand in the High
+Commissioner, in whom is vested the government of
+all South Africa apart from the self-governing colonies.
+It was the custom formerly to combine this office with
+the governorship of the Cape: for the moment it is
+joined with the governorship of the Transvaal and
+the Orange River Colony. With the present narrow
+definition of the High Commissioner&rsquo;s duties, it is
+right that this should be so; but there is no constitutional
+reason why he should not be a separate
+official. It has never been a popular office with self-governing
+colonies, who dislike the idea that the
+governorship should have in one of its aspects powers
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</a></span>
+over which the colony has no control; but this objection
+could not arise to the head of a federal
+government. By the letters patent of 1900 the
+High Commissioner is invested with the control of
+the South African Constabulary in the new colonies
+and the administration of the Central South African
+railways, and he is empowered to call together conferences
+of the self-governing colonies for the discussion
+of common problems. Here is already existing
+the administrative machinery of a federation.
+The rock on which many federal enterprises have
+split is the election of the supreme head, and in most
+systems it is the weakest point. But South Africa
+is saved this part of the problem. She has a supreme
+federal office, which has existed for more than twenty
+years, and with the slightest alteration of functions
+the High Commissionership could be transformed into
+a Federal Viceroyalty.</p>
+
+<p>South Africa, again, is for all practical purposes a
+geographical whole. The vast tableland which makes
+up nine-tenths of it has almost everywhere uniform
+climatic conditions, and the strips of coast land have
+among themselves a comparatively uniform character,
+so that two types may be said to exhaust its geographical
+and climatic features. There is no distinction so
+radical as between the Atlantic states and Texas or
+between Nebraska and the Pacific seaboard. This
+physical harmony prevents any natural cleavages,
+such as impassable mountain-ranges or large navigable
+rivers; and it imposes upon the inhabitants uniformity
+in modes of travel, and in the simpler conditions of
+life. If we look at the people of the several states we
+find a common nationality&mdash;or rather a common admixture
+of nationalities. The English proportion may
+be much higher in Natal and the eastern province of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</a></span>
+Cape Colony, the Dutch in the western province and
+the Orange River Colony; but everywhere there is
+the same divided race, and in consequence kindred
+political problems. There is, further, one supreme
+Imperial Government for all, one constitutional tradition
+to provide, as it were, a background to local
+politics and a basis for federation. There are common
+dangers from invasion, against which all the colonies
+are protected by one navy. Subject to minor local
+differences, there is a common structure observable in
+the constitutions of the several self-governing colonies
+to which the Transvaal and Orange River Colony will
+no doubt in time approximate. Many of the most
+vital problems are the same for the whole of South
+Africa,&mdash;the control and the civilisation of the natives,
+the amalgamation of the two white races, the conservation
+of water, the protection against pests and
+stock diseases. Two of the most important administrative
+departments have already a common
+basis, if they are still far from complete union.
+All South African railway systems, now that the old
+Beira line has been relaid, have the same gauge, their
+rolling stock is interchangeable, officials pass readily
+from one system to another, and by means of railway
+conferences attempts have been made to arrive at a
+common understanding on railway policy. Finally, all
+South Africa is now united in one Customs Union.</p>
+
+<p>But if the centripetal elements,<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> which make for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</a></span>
+federation, are numerous and potent, disjunctive and
+centrifugal forces also exist, though they create no
+difficulties which a patient statesmanship could not
+surmount. The obvious historical and racial differences
+between the colonies may be neglected, for,
+though on one side a force of separation, they are
+in another and more important aspect an agency for
+union, since they create a problem which in some form
+or other every colony has to meet. The primary disruptive
+force is economic. The interests, the material
+interests, of the population of each colony are widely
+different. In Cape Colony, on the whole, the farming
+interest predominates, though there, again, there is
+an internal distinction between the aims of the vine-growing
+and agricultural south-west and the pastoral
+north and east. Natal, so far as it is not a huge forwarding
+agency, is also based on agriculture. The
+Orange River Colony, though it has a respectable
+mining interest, is, and will doubtless remain, pre-eminently
+a pastoral state. The development of
+Rhodesia is not yet quite apparent, but it is probable
+that it will end by having a mining and a
+farming interest of about equal strength. But the
+Transvaal is overwhelmingly industrial both in population
+and prospects. In time, no doubt, Transvaal
+agriculture will play an important part, but the main
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</a></span>
+asset of the colony must long be found in her mines,
+and the subsidiary industries created by them, which
+will be left as a legacy when the reefs are worked out
+to the last pennyweight. That is to say, in South
+Africa there are three colonies where the predominant
+interest is agricultural,&mdash;one in which the mining and
+farming interests are likely to be evenly matched, and
+one, the richest and therefore not the least important,
+in which the mining interest casts all others into the
+shade. It is obvious that economic policy will vary
+greatly in each, even in those general matters which
+would naturally fall under the survey of a federal
+government. The bias of the agricultural colonies is
+towards protection; the absolute necessity of Rhodesia
+and the Transvaal is free trade or a near approach to
+it. The industrial population of the Rand must have
+food at a reasonable price, else the labour bill will
+wipe off the profits of the mines, and to secure this
+cheap food, taking into consideration the long railway
+freights, entry at the coast free of duty is desired.
+So too with the raw material of mining: any taxation
+of such imports is directly inimical to the prosperity
+of South Africa&rsquo;s foremost industry. On the other
+hand, the coast farmers have good grounds to complain.
+They look to the Rand for their market, and
+unless they are to be secured from the competition
+of lands like the Argentine, where food-stuffs can be
+grown almost as a waste product, they will grumble
+against any rebate of coast duties.</p>
+
+<p>The deadlock might be final were it not for the
+geographical position of the Transvaal. Had she a
+port of her own she might well decline any federation,
+and continue to import on her own terms, leaving the
+other colonies to make the best of it. But, as things
+stand, she has to bring in most of her imports through
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</a></span>
+ports in the coast colonies, and for a large part of the
+distance over their lines of railway. Were this, again,
+a full statement of the case, the Transvaal might be
+at the mercy of the other colonies, and be compelled
+to accept their terms or starve. But fortunately the
+Transvaal, while not in a position to dictate absolutely,
+has a card of her own by which she can
+command reasonable treatment. She can import by
+the much shorter line from Delagoa Bay, and she is
+contemplating the construction of an alternative line
+to the same port. These two lines, when completed,
+will make her virtually independent of the coast
+colonies, provided&mdash;a provision which there seems
+no reason to doubt&mdash;a good understanding is maintained
+with Portugal. Clearly some <i>modus vivendi</i>
+must be arrived at if there is not to be an endless
+friction, which can only result in inconvenience to the
+interior colony and great financial loss to the coast.<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></p>
+
+<p>This chief centrifugal force, divergence of economic
+interests, becomes, therefore, in practice a powerful
+centripetal force, the chief lever of federation. Some
+kind of harmony must be attained; the only question
+is whether this agreement is to be partial and temporary
+or thorough and final. Federation, while on
+its practical side a familiar policy to all classes in
+South Africa, is still in its political aspect a little
+strange to men&rsquo;s minds, smacking somewhat of constitutional
+doctrinairedom. When we are dealing
+with self-governing colonies, there can be no question
+of imposing it as a mandate from above: to be
+effective and permanent it must come from within,
+a proposal based on a national conviction. There
+was, indeed, a time in the last year of the war
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</a></span>
+when Cape Colony lay in the throes of disruption,
+and her wisest citizens were weary of the vagaries of
+her politics; when Natal was acquiescent, and when
+the new colonies were still a battlefield. It seemed
+to many that then a federation might have been
+imposed with the consent of most thinking men.
+But the moment passed; local politics were restored
+to their old activity, and the opportunity for imperial
+interference was gone. A federal movement must
+therefore advance slowly and circumspectly, and be
+content with small beginnings, lest any hint of
+coercion should drive the units still farther apart.</p>
+
+<p>There is no argument so convincing as success,
+and a satisfactory federation in miniature would go
+far to prepare the way for the larger scheme. Fortunately
+we have one sphere where experiments towards
+federation can be given a fair trial. The Transvaal
+and the Orange River Colony are under one governor
+and the same system of government. Though they
+have many points of difference, they have also many
+common problems which are even now dealt with by
+one central authority. The South African Constabulary
+in the two colonies is one force under one
+Inspector-General. The Central South African railways,
+which control the whole railway system, are
+under one Railway Commissioner and one General
+Manager. Education is under one Director of Education.
+In addition to this departmental union, the two
+colonies are subject to one common debt, the Guaranteed
+Loan. The War Debt lies for the present
+wholly on the Transvaal;<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> but the loan for reconstruction
+is devoted to purposes common to both,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</a></span>
+and they are jointly and severally liable for its interest
+and redemption. If the Orange River Colony
+were to pay its fair share of the interest&mdash;having
+regard to the capital expenditure apportioned to it&mdash;it
+would be bankrupt to-morrow. It must either
+pay a great deal less than its due, or some arrangement
+must be arrived at by which there is no fixed
+apportionment of either interest or capital, but the
+whole debt is administered jointly, and charged
+upon certain common properties.</p>
+
+<p>The method adopted has been fully explained in
+another chapter. Here it will be sufficient to point
+out the federal consequences of the arrangement. If
+the railways, the South African Constabulary, and all
+common services are to be charged to one common
+budget, and subjected to a common administration,
+then some kind of common council must be established
+with a share of both legislative and executive powers.
+It would be necessary to give this council, or some
+committee of it, the final decision in railway administration,
+to grant it power to operate upon railway
+profits, and to make grants for the services of the
+loan, and for other services placed under its authority,
+without reference to the councils of the separate
+colonies. Such powers have not been unknown in
+constitutional history, and Austro-Hungary furnishes
+an instructive precedent. There we find a common
+executive, not responsible to either of the two Parliaments,
+for such common interests as foreign affairs,
+the army, and imperial finance. On most matters
+connected with these common interests the separate
+Parliaments legislate; but the voting of money for
+common purposes and the control of the common
+executive is placed in the hands of the famous
+Delegations, which are appointed by the two Parliaments.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</a></span>
+The position is, therefore, that there is a
+common Ministry for Finance, War, and Foreign
+Affairs, controlled by the Delegations, and working
+on funds voted and appropriated by the Delegations.
+This power of appropriation without ratification by
+the separate colonies is the essence of the new council,
+which is thus, to continue the parallel, a compound of
+the Delegations and the Common Ministry of Austro-Hungary.
+Certain funds are ear-marked for its use,
+and its deficits, if any, will be met by contributions,
+in certain fixed proportions, from the treasuries of the
+two colonies; while its surplus, if it is ever fortunate
+enough to have one, will be divided, in whole or in
+part, between the two colonies, going as a matter of
+fact to assist in meeting the charges of the War Debt.
+It has an administrative control over all existing
+common services, and any other which may be subsequently
+put under its charge by the local legislatures.</p>
+
+<p>Such a council obviously falls far short of a true
+federation. It is primarily a financial expedient to
+provide a simple and effective machinery for administering
+somewhat complicated finances. But it is a
+step, and a considerable step, in the right direction.
+Its executive functions are concerned with truly
+federal matters; and its powers of acting alone in
+questions of administration, and of voting and appropriating
+funds without reference to the separate
+legislatures, is a recognition of the central doctrine
+of federation. Indeed at the present moment the
+two new colonies have a <i>de facto</i> federal government.
+The grant to the new council of legislative powers on
+matters of common interest, and the corresponding
+limitation of the powers of the separate legislatures,
+would establish a complete <i>de jure</i> federation. There
+is no reason why this goal should not soon be reached.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</a></span>
+The two colonies are bound together by many ties,&mdash;above
+all, by that most stringent bond, a common
+debt. For three years they have been administered
+by one governor. Though there may be symptoms of
+local jealousy in both, there can be no real popular
+objection, as there is no logical reason, against their
+federation.</p>
+
+<p>But while the new colonies present a simple problem,
+the extension of the policy to the self-governing
+colonies requires delicate and cautious handling. If
+the limited federation be a success, it will have the
+power of a good example, especially since there are
+many throughout South Africa to seize and emphasise
+the lesson. Meantime other agencies are at work for
+union. The Bloemfontein Conference of March 1903,
+which, in addition to settling a customs&rsquo; tariff and
+recommending a preferential policy for British goods,
+passed resolutions on certain questions, such as native
+affairs, of wide South African interest, is the type of
+that informal advisory union which may well come
+into being at once. The appointment, further, of a
+South African committee to investigate some of the
+more vexed and obscure details of native policy, is
+another step in the same direction. The new colonies,
+which contain the chief motive force for South Africa&rsquo;s
+future, must give the lead. They hold in their hands
+the guide-ropes, for federation may be said to depend
+upon the development of two problems&mdash;the racial and
+the economic; and both reach their typical form in
+the new colonies. In these questions are involved the
+chief grounds of separation and the chief impulses
+towards union, and according as the new colonies
+settle them within their own bounds will arise the
+need and desire for a more comprehensive settlement.</p>
+
+<p>The type of federation which South Africa may
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</a></span>
+adopt will, no doubt, vary considerably from most
+historical precedents. It should in certain respects
+be more rigid, since, apart from a few outstanding
+troubles, there are no permanent differences between
+the parts. In certain respects, too, it should be more
+elastic, for a federated South Africa would be not only
+a substantive state, but a member of a greater system,
+and some of the old free colonial traditions which
+pertain to that system should be left to the federated
+units. It is a vain task at this stage to attempt the
+outlines of a scheme, since the foundations are not yet
+fully apparent. Needs which are now in embryo will
+be factors to be reckoned with when the time is ripe,
+and perhaps some of the forces which seem to us
+to-day to dominate all else will have disappeared or
+decreased in strength. There is a wealth of historical
+precedent for South African statesmen to follow; for,
+apart from the United States and sundry European
+parallels, there are two types of federation within the
+colonial system&mdash;the Dominion of Canada and the
+recently created Australian Commonwealth. Between
+them these two cases provide a most complete parallel
+for South Africa. In Canada there was a distinction
+of races not less marked than Dutch and English.
+There was, further, an imperfectly explored hinterland
+which the colonists looked to bring by degrees under
+the same constitution. In Australia there were grave
+intercolonial disputes on railways and customs and a
+wide divergence of economic interests. A keen
+jealousy was felt by the smaller for the larger states,
+and the scheme of federation had to be delicately
+framed to adjust state pride with federal requirements.
+On the whole, the difficulties which the framers of
+the federal constitution had to face in Canada and
+Australia were greater than we find in South Africa:
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</a></span>
+in the United States, immeasurably greater. But
+often the probability of federation stands in inverse
+ratio to the ease with which it can be effected, and the
+very simplicity of this South African problem may
+delay its settlement. There are, however, forces which
+must between them hasten the end. One is the
+economic disparity, at least as great as in Australia
+and greater than in Canada, which makes itself felt so
+constantly in the daily life of the inland colonies, that
+they may find themselves compelled to push the matter
+in spite of the apathy of the coast. The other is the
+very real national sentiment which is growing to
+maturity in the country. The war has welded the
+English inhabitants into something approaching a
+nation. Having suffered so deeply, they are the less
+prone to local jealousies and the more attached to the
+ideal of imperial unity.</p>
+
+<p>A scheme of South African federation, as has been
+said, will have to differ materially from any of the
+existing types. Though details are premature, certain
+principles may be accepted as essential. The first
+concerns the subjects relegated to the Federal Government.
+In the United States these are, roughly,
+foreign affairs, the army and navy, federal courts of
+justice, commerce, currency, the post office, certain
+general branches of commercial law, such as copyrights
+and patents, an oversight of the separate states to
+protect the inhabitants against any infringement of
+the fundamental rights granted by the constitution,
+and taxation for federal purposes. Several of these
+functions are needless in a federation of English
+colonies. Foreign affairs and army and navy questions
+assume a different form from what they present
+in a wholly separate community; and since there is no
+<i>Grondwet</i> known to English constitutional law, there
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</a></span>
+is no need for an oversight of the separate states in
+case of its infringement. That is already provided for
+by the ultimate right of the British Crown to annul
+legislation which may conflict with the chartered
+rights or limitations of a colony. But there are
+certain powers, not referred to in the American
+scheme, which are essential to a modern system.
+Railways, telephones, and telegraphs should come
+under the purview of the national Government, as also
+all customs tariffs and all bounties which may be
+granted on production. Powers must be given to the
+national Government to take over the existing debts
+of the separate states, and in times of financial distress
+to come to their assistance. On judicial and legal
+questions&mdash;the nature of the federal courts, the
+mechanism of appeal, the branches of law which are
+suitable for federal jurisdiction&mdash;it is impossible to
+speak; as it is premature to attempt an outline of the
+constitution of the federal Government, the form of its
+legislation, the functions of its executive. Such questions
+require long and careful consideration on the
+part of the South African colonies, and may happily
+take their colour, when the time arrives, from some
+accepted scheme of imperial federation. Two points
+only may be noted as even now obvious desiderata of
+policy. In Canada the state governors are appointed
+by the federal Ministry; in Australia they are nominated
+by the Crown in the same way as the Governor-General.
+Experience has shown that the Australian
+method is the superior one, since it allows a state
+governor and his ministers to communicate directly
+with the imperial Government, and so preserve a
+formal independence which is at once harmless and
+grateful to state pride. It is impossible to doubt that
+the Australian precedent should be followed in South
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</a></span>
+Africa. The second point concerns the method of
+effecting federation. The Canadian scheme was based
+on resolutions drafted by a conference of delegates
+at Quebec. They were approved by the legislatures
+of the provinces, embodied in a bill drafted by a committee
+of Canadian statesmen, and passed by the
+imperial Government. Federation was thus, as in the
+United States, the work of conferences and legislatures
+alone. Australia, recognising that this was a question
+which deeply concerned the population of the colonies,
+followed a better plan. The federal constitution, after
+passing through a long period of conferences and
+examinations by state legislatures, was submitted to
+a direct popular vote, and a certain majority was prescribed
+for it in each state. Such a federation, secured
+by the consent of a whole people, has a stability
+against future attacks and captious emendation which
+belongs to no scheme sanctioned only by a legislative
+body. For though popular representation is in
+theory a representation for all things, yet a matter
+so vital in its application and so far-reaching in its
+issues deserves to be made the subject of a special
+mandate.</p>
+
+<p>I have said that foreign affairs and army and navy
+questions do not, under the ordinary practice of the
+colonial system, have much connection with colonial
+governments, and therefore may be left out of most
+federal proposals. But though the technical last word
+may never lie with the Federal Government, yet a
+South African federation would have genuine foreign
+interests, and would keep a watchful eye on the
+movements of the colonising Powers of Europe. Had
+there been a federation, there would have been no
+German acquisition of Damaraland, nor would we
+have found imperial authorities refusing the offer of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</a></span>
+Lourenço Marques for a trifling sum. No colonist can
+ever quite forgive those memorable blunders, which
+prevented British South Africa from having that
+geographical unity from the Zambesi to the Cape
+which its interests demand. Thirty years ago it would
+have been easy for Britain to proclaim a Monroe doctrine
+for South Africa&mdash;for that matter of it, for East
+Africa also. The opportunity has passed, but a strong
+national Government could still exercise great influence
+on foreign affairs, and prevent encroachment
+upon Portuguese territories by that Power which
+twenty years ago saw in Africa material for a new
+German Empire and has never forgotten its grandiose
+dreams, as well as keep an eye upon that dangerous
+mushroom growth, the Congo Free State, and check
+its glaring offences against civilisation. Army and
+navy questions belong, in their broadest sense, to
+schemes of imperial federation, a discussion of which
+here would be out of place; but since there is already
+in South Africa a large military force under one commander-in-chief,
+certain army questions arise which
+may find their proper answer only in federation, but
+which even now require a provisional settlement.
+According as we treat the matter, it may become a
+unifying or a violently disjunctive force, a step towards
+federation or a movement towards a wider disintegration.
+The bearing of the army question on South
+African policy is the subject of another chapter.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a>
+American Commonwealth, vol. i. p. 465.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a>
+The grounds of Australian federation are a useful parallel for South
+Africa. I give Mr Bryce&rsquo;s list (&lsquo;Studies in History and Jurisprudence,&rsquo;
+vol. i. p. 478): &ldquo;The gain to trade and the general convenience to be
+expected from abolishing the tariffs established on the frontiers of each
+colony; the need for a common system of military defence; the advantages
+of a common legislature for the regulation of railways and the fixing
+of railway rates; the advantages of a common control of the larger rivers
+for the purposes both of navigation and irrigation; the need for uniform
+legislation on a number of commercial topics; the importance of finding
+an authority competent to provide for old-age pensions and for the settlement
+of labour disputes all over the country; the need for uniform provision
+against the entry of coloured races (especially Chinese, Malays,
+and Indian coolies); the gain to suitors from the establishment of a High
+Court to entertain appeals and avoid the expense and delay involved in
+carrying cases to the Privy Council in England; the probability that
+money could be borrowed more easily on the credit of the Australian
+Federation than by each colony for itself; the stimulus to be given to
+industry and trade by substituting one great community for six smaller
+ones; the possibility of making better arrangements for the disposal of
+the unappropriated lands belonging to some of the colonies than could be
+made by those colonies for themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a>
+A provisional <i>modus vivendi</i> has been found in the new Customs
+Union. See p. <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a>
+There is a contingent liability on the Orange River Colony to pay
+a sum of £5,000,000, as its special contribution, from any profit which
+may fall to its Government from the discovery of precious minerals.
+See p. <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XVIII.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE ARMY AND SOUTH AFRICA.</h4>
+
+<p>The foremost political lesson of the late war was the
+solidarity of military spirit throughout the Empire.
+But this cohesion is only in spirit, and the actual
+position of colonial forces is that of isolated units,
+connected in no system, and subject to no central
+direction. For a student of military law, or that
+branch of it which concerns the relation of military
+forces to the civil power, a survey of the British
+colonies has much curious interest. Speaking generally,
+since 1868 there have been no imperial forces
+in any self-governing colony, since we have acted
+on the principle that when a colony became autonomous
+the defence of its borders, except by sea, must
+be left to its own government. Colonial troops are,
+therefore, militia and volunteer, who take different
+forms according to the needs of the colony. In
+some the militia, or a part of it, is to all intents
+a regular force, performing garrison duty and acting
+as a school of instruction for the other auxiliary
+forces. In Canada, for example, there were in 1902 a
+troop of cavalry, a troop of mounted rifles, two batteries
+of field artillery, two companies of garrison
+artillery, and a battalion of infantry, in which the men
+were enlisted for three years&rsquo; continuous service. In
+New South Wales, to take one state of the Australian
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</a></span>
+Commonwealth, provision was made for a permanent
+force, which included a half-squadron of cavalry, three
+companies of garrison artillery and one field battery,
+a company of infantry and various supplementary
+services, with men enlisted for five years. In New
+Zealand the enlistment for the permanent force, which
+consists of artillery and submarine miners, is for eight
+years, three of which may be passed in the reserve.
+Next comes the militia proper on the home model,
+where the men are partially paid and are subject to a
+certain amount of annual training. Lastly there is
+a wide volunteer organisation, stretching from fully organised
+companies of infantry and mounted rifles down
+to small local rifle clubs. In certain colonies where
+there is an aboriginal or unsettled population, such as
+Canada, Cape Colony, and Natal, there is also a permanently
+embodied police force, which may rank with
+the permanent militia as a sort of colonial regulars.
+All such forces are under the full control of the
+Colonial Governments, whether, as in the Australian
+Commonwealth and Canada, under the Federal
+Ministry of Defence, or, as in Cape Colony, under the
+department of the Prime Minister. An imperial officer
+may be lent, as in Canada and Australia to-day, for the
+command of the colonial force, but as soon as he enters
+upon his command he becomes a servant of the Colonial
+Government. To that Government alone belongs the
+power of raising new forces, of changing the status of
+existing troops, of ordering their distribution, of regulating
+their rates of pay, and of lending them for service
+beyond the colony. A strong general officer commanding
+may have great influence in all such decisions, but
+technically he is merely an adviser who receives his
+orders from the local authorities.</p>
+
+<p>This is one chief type of the organisation of our
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</a></span>
+over-sea imperial force. The other is furnished by
+India. There we have a native Indian army, and
+a large number of imperial troops, all of whom are
+under the authority of the commander-in-chief in
+India, who in turn is under the control of the
+Indian Government. When imperial troops are
+stationed in any other part of the Empire they are
+commanded by an officer who is directly subject to
+the War Office; but in India, as soon as a battalion
+lands it takes the status of the local forces and
+passes under the authority of the local government.
+The War Office retains certain powers, but for all
+practical purposes the Indian command is wholly
+decentralised.</p>
+
+<p>South Africa affords the spectacle of a confusion
+of the two types. It is made up partly of Crown
+colonies and dependencies and partly of self-governing
+states. At this moment it is occupied by imperial
+troops whose numbers, for the purpose of this argument,
+may be put at 30,000. Such troops are
+stationed in Cape Colony and Natal as well as in
+the new colonies, and the command has been unified
+and vested in one commander-in-chief, who is subject
+only to the War Office and has no responsibility
+to the local governments. We have, therefore, the
+anomalous case of an autonomous colony occupied by
+imperial troops, a policy which is out of line with
+English practice. When self-government is given to
+the Transvaal and the Orange River Colony, the
+South African general will command what will be
+neither more nor less than an alien army of occupation.
+At the same time, wholly apart from the
+regular forces, there are police troops in Natal, Cape
+Colony, the new colonies, and Rhodesia; and a large
+number of volunteer regiments, who are directly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</a></span>
+under the control of the local governments. The
+South African military organisation is thus split
+in two by a deep gulf, and unless some method of
+union is found, we shall be confronted with a system
+alien to the tradition of our colonial policy and in
+itself clumsy and unworkable. But this question is
+intimately bound up with others&mdash;the desirability
+of the retention of imperial troops, the organisation
+of such troops in relation to the imperial army,
+indeed the whole question of that branch of imperial
+federation which is concerned with the defence
+of the Empire. It involves certain problems of
+military reform which are violently contested by
+good authorities. In this chapter it is proposed, as
+far as possible, to consider the matter of the South
+African army solely from the standpoint of South
+African politics, referring to the military aspect
+only in so far as may be necessary at points where
+South African politics are merged in wider schemes
+of imperial unity.</p>
+
+<p>The first question concerns the policy of keeping
+imperial troops in South Africa at all. The size of
+the force depends, of course, on the duties which
+it is intended to perform, but for the retention of
+some troops there seems to be every justification.
+Few people believe that there is much likelihood of
+another outbreak, but after a war of the magnitude
+of that which we have recently gone through it
+would seem scarcely provident to leave the peace
+of the country solely to the care of the police. In
+a country, again, where British prestige is a plant
+of recent growth, it is well to provide the moral
+support of regular battalions. If useful for no other
+purpose, they serve as a memento of war, a constant
+reminder of the existence of an imperial power behind
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</a></span>
+all local administration. We have also to face the
+fact that we have committed ourselves to some kind
+of occupation force by undertaking a large preliminary
+expenditure on cantonments, which will be money
+wasted if the scheme is dropped. For this purpose
+we have spent between two and three millions, and
+unless we are to be held guilty of causeless extravagance,
+we must abide by the plan to which this
+outlay has committed us.</p>
+
+<p>The original scheme was for a garrison force. For
+this purpose 30,000 men are too many if our forecast
+be correct, and far too few if it be wrong. Half the
+number would be ample for any peace establishment,
+and we may be perfectly certain that as soon as self-government
+is declared in the new colonies there
+would be many attempts to cut down the number or
+do away with the force altogether. Alien garrison
+troops will be always unpopular, and, as has been said,
+they are foreign to British policy with regard to
+autonomous colonies. A force on the garrison basis
+would find itself with little to do, the general commanding
+would be exposed to the jealousy of the
+colonial troops, and involved in constant difficulties
+with the colonial governments, and, save in the unlikely
+event of a rebellion, would have no very obvious
+justification for the existence of his command.</p>
+
+<p>If South Africa is to remain a station for any considerable
+number of imperial troops, some mode of
+co-operation must be discovered with the local governments.
+This co-operation would be possible between
+the colonial administration and a garrison force; but
+it would be infinitely more satisfactory if the whole
+status of the imperial troops were changed. For a
+garrison establishment makes it difficult, if not impossible,
+not only to bring the general commanding
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</a></span>
+into touch with the governments, but to bring the
+local troops into line with the regular, and both unions
+must be accomplished before any satisfactory settlement
+can be given to the problem. The simplest
+solution was to treat the South African force, not as a
+garrison, but as part of the regular army on the home
+establishment, sent there for the purpose of training,
+and liable to be utilised at any moment for active
+service in any part of the Empire. There are certain
+objections to the scheme, plausible enough though not
+insuperable, from the military standpoint; but for the
+present we may limit our argument to those points
+which concern South Africa, and those difficulties
+which spring from the nature of the country&mdash;difficulties
+which are far more real to the soldiers who are
+directly concerned than the wider question of the
+present scheme of military organisation.</p>
+
+<p>The advantages are sufficiently obvious. There are
+few finer man&oelig;uvring grounds in the world than the
+great Central South African tableland. There is
+sufficient cover to make scouting possible and not
+enough to make it easy, and the intense clearness of
+the air and its singular acoustic properties will train
+a man&rsquo;s senses to a perfection unknown in other
+armies and impossible to acquire in the restricted
+areas of a populous country. The soldier will have
+to face the rudiments of war in a far more difficult
+country than he is likely to be used in. He will learn
+to shoot, or rather to judge ranges correctly under
+unwonted conditions, which is rarer and more vital
+than mere accurate marksmanship. He will learn
+the real roughness of campaigning in long man&oelig;uvres;
+and from the same cause regiments will acquire that
+elasticity and cohesion which come from constant
+working together. If we except enteric, caused by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</a></span>
+bad sanitation, which has been the curse of the war,
+but is not a speciality of the country, the veld is
+almost exempt from diseases. Life there will not only
+train the senses and the intelligence, but will give
+health and physical stamina. A year of such training
+will make a man of the young recruit from the slums
+of an English city. Physique is the final determinant
+in war, and with our present system of recruiting and
+training there is no guarantee for its existence. Lastly,
+our soldiers trained on the veld will become natural
+horse masters, which few even of the cavalry are at
+present. They will learn that care of their horses
+which every Boer has as a birthright, that simple
+veterinary skill and common-sense whose lack has cost
+us so many millions. South Africa is a natural horse-breeding
+country, and in co-operation with Government
+stud-farms a breed of remounts could be got
+which would unite the merits of the Afrikander pony
+with the weight and bone required for army work.
+Instead of having to ransack foreign countries for our
+horses, we should breed all we wanted for ourselves
+under the eye of our imperial officers, and breed them
+too in a place which is the best centre in the Empire
+for distribution to any possible seat of war.</p>
+
+<p>The objections to the scheme are partly of sentiment
+and partly of technical difficulties. South
+African service, it is said, is at present unpopular.
+Our army has recently concluded a long and arduous
+war, fought under conditions of extreme discomfort.
+Small wonder if troops who have been kicking their
+heels for eighteen months in remote blockhouses
+should have little good to say of the pleasures of the
+life. For the officers there have been dismal quarters,
+a cheerless dusty country, heavy expenses, little sport,
+and no society; and the lot of the men, though
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</a></span>
+relatively less hard, has been equally comfortless.
+The proper answer to such a contention is to ignore
+it. It is the objection of the non-professional officer,
+and cannot be entertained. The forces in South
+Africa are sent there for training, not for garrison
+life, and if the place is a good training-ground, the
+question of congenial society and interesting recreation
+has nothing to do with the matter.<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> But there
+is no reason why South African life for the future
+should be unattractive. An English society is rapidly
+arising, English sports are becoming popular, the
+cantonments can easily be made comfortable homes,
+and there are a thousand ways, such as the allotting
+to each soldier who desires it a small patch of land to
+cultivate, in which the men can be made to feel an
+interest in the country. For the officers there is a
+sporting hinterland as fine and as accessible as the
+Pamirs to the Indian sportsman. Living is undoubtedly
+more costly, and there will have to be
+special allowances for South African service; but with
+a proper canteen system, such as existed during the
+war, the cost of luxuries might be kept low enough
+for all. There is a future, too, for the reservist which
+he cannot look for at home. Even as an unskilled
+workman he can command wages which are unknown
+in England; and the men who, at the end of their
+three years&rsquo; service, would join the South African
+reserve, would be young enough to begin civil life in
+whatever walk they might choose.</p>
+
+<p>The chief technical difficulties, exclusive of sea-transport,
+which is outside our review, are the extra
+cost, the difficulty of recruiting, and the delays in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</a></span>
+bringing reservists from home in case of active service.
+The last will be met in a little while by the creation
+of a South African reserve; but in the meantime
+there are many ways in which it might be surmounted.
+Battalions might be brought up to fighting
+strength by the inclusion of men from local forces.
+It would be an easy matter to introduce into the
+terms of enlistment of the South African Constabulary
+a condition of foreign service, and to keep from 1000
+to 2000 men in readiness. It would be possible also
+to enlist 1000 men of the Transvaal volunteer force
+for special foreign service, paying to each man a bonus
+of £12 per annum. The real solution of this difficulty
+is bound up, as we shall see later, with the whole
+theory of a colonial army; but even on the present
+system it is easy to provide a working expedient.
+The question of extra cost&mdash;for each man would
+require an extra 6d. per day, or £9, 2s. 6d. per
+annum&mdash;is answered by pointing out that such a
+force being on the home establishment would do
+away with the necessity of linked battalions, and
+would effect a saving of twenty-four battalions and
+six regiments of cavalry, so that even if the extra
+cost were 50 per cent, the total saving would far
+outbalance it.<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> The recruiting difficulty is unlikely
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</a></span>
+to be a serious one. We may lose to the army a
+little of the loose fringe of half-grown boys from the
+towns,&mdash;stuff which, as history has shown, can be
+transformed into excellent fighting men, but which
+at the same time does not represent the last word
+either in moral or physical qualities. But many of
+the best of our young men, whose thoughts turn
+naturally to the colonies, would gladly seize the
+chance of three years&rsquo; service there, in which they
+would gain experience of the new lands, and be able
+to judge, when their turn came for entering reserves,
+which line of life promised most. No Emigration
+Bureau or Settlement Board would be so effective
+an agency in bringing the right class to the country.
+But, further, such a system would throw open to us
+the vast recruiting-grounds of our colonies. It is
+difficult for one who has not been brought face to face
+with it to realise the military enthusiasm which the
+war has kindled not only among the more inflammable,
+but among the coolest and shrewdest of our younger
+colonists. They know&mdash;none better&mdash;the joints in
+our armour; but they have paid generous tribute to
+the solidarity of spirit, the gallantry of our leaders,
+the unbreakable constancy of our men. A few fanciful
+war correspondents have done a gross injustice to our
+colonial soldiers by painting them as a race of capable
+braggarts, who laughed at our incompetence in a
+game which they understood so vastly better. It
+is safe to say that in the better class there was no
+hint of such a spirit; and the way in which irregular
+horse, with fine records of service, have traced the
+source of victory in the last resort to the stamina
+of the British infantry, does credit both to their
+judgment and their chivalry. They have become
+keen critics of any organisation, looking at war not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</a></span>
+only with the eyes of fighting men but of professional
+soldiers. All the details of the profession are of interest
+to them, and an imperial force in South Africa
+could draw largely both for officers and men upon
+the local population. The benefit of such a result,
+both to the colonies and to ourselves, is difficult to
+over-estimate. A common profession would do much
+to smooth away the petty differences which are always
+apt to widen out gulfs. The army would
+become a vast nursery of the true imperial spirit,
+and a school to perpetuate the best of our English
+traditions; and would itself gain incalculably by the
+infusion of new and virile blood, and the weakening
+of prejudices, both of class and education, which at
+present are a grave menace to its efficiency.</p>
+
+<p class="smlpadt">If the imperial Government accept the retention of
+a South African Army Corps as part of the home
+establishment, it is worth while considering how best
+this new departure in army policy can be used to
+further the interests of South Africa herself, and
+those wider imperial interests which are daily taking
+concrete shape and casting their shadow over local
+politics. Leaving for a moment the question of imperial
+forces, we find in South Africa a local military
+activity which, though less completely organised than
+in some of the older colonies, is yet well worth our
+reckoning with. The war brought into being a large
+number of irregular corps, most of which have now
+disappeared. In Cape Colony the permanent force
+is the Cape Mounted Rifles, which has an average
+strength of 1000 men, enlisted for five years, and
+sworn to &ldquo;act as a police force throughout the
+colony, and also as a military force for the defence
+of the colony.&rdquo; Since the war the town guards
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</a></span>
+and district mounted troops, the former limited to
+10,000 and the latter to 5000 men, have been
+placed on a permanent footing. They are loosely
+organised volunteer forces, enlisted for no fixed
+period, and bound to serve in the one case in
+the neighbourhood of the towns, and in the other
+within their own districts. There are also a number
+of ordinary volunteer corps, composed chiefly of
+mounted infantry, and field and garrison artillery,
+and a number of mounted rifle clubs for local defence.
+All types of corps included, there are probably not
+less than 20,000 men undergoing some kind of
+military training and pledged to some form of service
+in Cape Colony alone. Natal presents a very similar
+picture. Her regulars are the Natal Police Force,
+with a strength, including the Zululand Police, of
+between 500 and 600 men, enlisted for three years,
+and including both mounted and foot divisions.
+There is a considerable volunteer force, with artillery,
+infantry, and mounted rifles, two companies of naval
+volunteers, and a number of rifle clubs with a strength
+of over 2000. We may put the defensive strength of
+Natal, which, considering her size, is remarkable, at
+a little under 5000 men. The British South African
+Police, which is stationed in Southern Rhodesia, has
+a strength of a little over 500, and the Southern
+Rhodesia Constabulary and volunteers increase the
+forces of that district to nearly 2000 men. In the
+new colonies the chief force is the South African
+Constabulary, with a nominal strength of 6000 men,
+of which two-thirds are stationed in the Transvaal.
+It is an expensive force, each man costing on an
+average £250 per annum; but there is reason to
+believe that the figure may soon be reduced to £200,
+or even less. In the Transvaal a volunteer force
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</a></span>
+has been organised of nine regiments. No ultimate
+strength has been fixed, but 10,000 may be taken as
+a fair estimate. In April 1903 the force numbered
+fully 3000, and as the country becomes more populous
+there is little reason to doubt that the maximum will
+be reached.<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
+
+<p>There is thus a force of over 40,000 men engaged
+in local defence throughout South Africa, and of this
+the 8000 police are for all practical purposes regular
+troops. At the present moment the command of this
+force is split up among the different colonial governments
+and is wholly dissociated from any connection
+with the command of the imperial regulars. We have
+seen that the situation is full of grave difficulties for
+the regulars themselves, since there is no place in
+colonial policy for an alien garrison force. But the
+strongest argument in the present system lies not
+in the difficulties which it involves but in the advantages
+which it forgoes. We have in South Africa a
+population which, to use Napier&rsquo;s famous distinction,
+is not only bellicose but martial, with a natural aptitude
+for soldiering and a keen interest in all details
+of military organisation. Until the regular command
+is brought into line with the local forces this genius
+will expend itself on casual volunteering, and when
+we next call for colonial aid we shall have the same
+haphazard units, instead of colonial regiments drilled
+and man&oelig;uvred on one system and forming a part of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</a></span>
+some regular division. The arguments for a federation
+of the whole South African command are difficult
+to meet, and there is little danger of opposition
+from the local governments. The danger lies in the
+fact that it would necessarily involve some reconstruction
+of our whole military system, and military
+conservatism is slow to depart from the traditions of
+the elders.</p>
+
+<p>If imperial defence means anything it must include
+the provision in every great colonial unit, in Canada,
+Australia, South Africa,&mdash;particularly in South Africa,&mdash;of
+a force on the lines of the Indian army, with
+an elastic organisation, embracing both imperial regulars
+and local troops. Granted the sanction of the
+imperial Government, there is no special difficulty in
+the machinery required to create it. If South Africa
+were federated it would be simplicity itself. All that
+would be wanted would be to bring the general officer
+commanding the imperial troops, since his command
+has been unified, into relation with the Federal Ministry
+of Defence, and unite in his person the functions
+which Sir Neville Lyttelton now exercises in South
+Africa and those which at present belong to Lord
+Dundonald in Canada. But, pending federation, we
+must have recourse to one of those intercolonial
+representative bodies which form the thin end of
+the federal wedge. The general commanding would
+be given the command of local forces by an act
+of the local legislature, subject in all questions of
+policy, finance, and organisation to the authority of
+an intercolonial committee of defence.<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> Each colony
+would elect two or more representatives, on the lines
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</a></span>
+of the present Intercolonial Council of the Transvaal
+and Orange River Colony; the council thus formed
+would be empowered by the legislatures which elect
+it to decide what share of the cost was to be borne by
+the separate colonies, to arrange for combined man&oelig;uvres,
+to supervise appointments, and, in case of
+local wars, to decide what force should be sent to the
+front, and in the event of an imperial war, to say
+what local forces should be lent for service. The
+general commanding would be responsible to the War
+Office for moving imperial troops, subject to its
+direction, and for the internal discipline and organisation
+of the imperial divisions. There would, thus,
+be clearly defined limits of authority for both the
+imperial and local Governments, and at the same
+time every inducement to co-operation. In so far as
+he was in command of the whole of the South African
+forces, the general commanding would be subject in
+South African matters to the defence committee;
+while, in so far as he was in command of imperial
+troops, he would take his orders on imperial questions,
+such as a foreign war, from the Home Government.
+The present officers in command of colonial police and
+volunteers would, of course, come under his authority
+precisely on the same basis as officers of regulars.</p>
+
+<p>The advantages of such a scheme are many, both
+from the standpoint of policy and of military efficiency.
+It would please the colonies, who would have
+an army of their own, drilled on regular lines and
+affiliated to the imperial army, and at the same time
+would feel that they had a share in the control of the
+forces and the military policy of the Empire. It
+would ensure the efficiency of local troops, and would
+prepare them for co-operation with the regulars,&mdash;not
+the clumsy partnership of troops tagged on to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</a></span>
+a division which cannot use them, but the true co-operation
+which follows on absorption in a larger unit
+with which they have been trained. It would provide
+an easy means for the transfer of colonial officers to
+imperial regiments, and would act as a magnet for
+colonial recruiting. In the case of local wars, as I
+have said, the whole force would be ready to take
+the field under the orders of the general commanding.
+In the case of a foreign war the imperial Government
+would direct the distribution of the regulars, and it
+would be for the committee of defence to say what
+local troops should be lent for foreign service.<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a>
+Beyond this, the only duties of the War Office
+would lie in the selection of staff officers and the
+general commanding&mdash;a matter in which the concurrence
+of the colonial governments might be obtained
+as a matter of courtesy. On the financial side
+it is probable that the scheme would considerably
+lessen the burden of defence. The only way in which
+the colonies can ever be expected to contribute to the
+cost of imperial defence is by providing armies and
+navies of their own. To pay for that which does not
+directly concern you is a form of tax, and so hostile
+to the letter and spirit of our colonial traditions.
+But if local governments are given a direct interest
+in an imperial army in which their own troops are
+subsumed, and whose policy they largely control, I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</a></span>
+do not think they will be ungenerous. There is no
+reason why they should not meet the cost of the
+general and his staff, and contribute part, if not the
+whole, of the extra pay which the regular troops
+in the South African command must receive, and the
+bonus to the volunteer corps which are held ready
+for foreign service. Such payments, once the federation
+were effected, would no doubt come as a spontaneous
+offer. Decentralisation and centralisation are,
+by way of becoming catchwords, repeated without
+understanding to justify the most diverse schemes.
+But every true policy must include both, since in
+certain matters it is well to decentralise, and in
+others unification is imperative. Such a scheme as
+has been sketched combines the sporadic colonial
+forces in one effective unit of organisation, and at
+the same time relieves the tension at imperial headquarters
+by relegating detailed administration to the
+local authorities, who are best fitted to supervise.</p>
+
+<p>The military is, as a rule, the most difficult aspect
+of a federation, but in our circumstances it is likely
+to be the simplest. We have a federal nucleus in
+the imperial command, and a strong impulse in the
+fact that the local volunteer and police forces have
+already served side by side with regulars in the field,
+and are inspired with a military spirit which may
+soon disappear unless fostered and utilised. A federation
+of local forces exists in Canada and in the
+Australian Commonwealth; a union of the imperial
+forces exists in South Africa. The problem is to
+federate the local forces in advance of a political
+federation, and to unite them with the imperial
+command in a system which, though a new departure
+in military policy, contains no detail which has not
+been somewhere or other already conceded. If the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</a></span>
+scheme in itself is worth anything, the practical
+difficulties are small. It is unlikely that the colonial
+governments will offer any opposition; and so far as
+South African interests are concerned, the foundations
+would be laid of a true federation. From the point
+of view of imperial politics the step would have an
+even greater significance, for a type would be created
+of a new army organisation which would provide
+for a federated imperial defence; and the precedent
+having once been created, the other colonies would
+readily follow suit.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a>
+The final answer to this objection would be the reorganisation of
+the militia&mdash;the only force for home defence&mdash;and the release of the
+present regular army for service over-sea.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a>
+I have thought it unnecessary to recapitulate in detail the financial
+argument used by advocates of this policy. Roughly it is as follows:
+The present Army Corps system provides for 78 battalions at home,
+66 in India, and 12 in South Africa&mdash;a total of 156. The proposed
+system provides for 42 at home, 24 in South Africa, and 66 in India&mdash;a
+total of 132. There is thus a saving of 24 battalions, besides 6 regiments
+of cavalry.</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Army finances">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl2">In figures, 24 battalions at £64,000</td>
+ <td class="tdrind2">=</td>
+ <td class="tdrind2">£1,536,000</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdl2">And 6 cavalry regiments at £45,000</td>
+ <td class="tdrind2">=</td>
+ <td class="tdrind2">£270,000</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="3" class="tdrind2 tdshort">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="tdr2">A total of</td>
+ <td colspan="2" class="tdrind2">£1,806,000</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Including supplementary expenses, the total reductions would be over
+£2,000,000.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a>
+The details of the force may be of interest. In April 1903 it consisted
+of two regiments of the Imperial Light Horse, one regiment of the
+South African Light Horse, one regiment of the Johannesburg Mounted
+Rifles, one regiment of the Scottish Horse, one regiment of the Central
+South African Railway Volunteers, one regiment of the Transvaal Light
+Infantry, one regiment of Transvaal Scottish, one regiment of Railway
+Pioneers, a medical staff corps, and a headquarters&rsquo; staff. The names of
+some of the most famous irregular corps are thus perpetuated. A new
+regiment&mdash;the Northern Rifles&mdash;has recently been formed at Pretoria.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a>
+A committee of defence has been formed in Natal, consisting of the
+officers commanding the imperial and the local forces and representatives
+of the local government.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a>
+This scheme would involve a departure from the present military
+organisation on the basis of army corps. We cannot expect to get an
+army corps for each colonial district, and the advantages disappear if
+such reinforcements are to be distributed to make up the strength of
+the army corps drawn from the whole Empire. The unit must be
+smaller&mdash;something in the nature of a division of, say, three brigades with
+one brigade of mounted troops. In South Africa we could have several
+divisions of regulars and several of local troops. The system would have
+the merit of harmonising with the organisation of the army in India,
+where reinforcements are most likely to be required.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>CHAPTER XIX.</h3>
+
+<h4>THE FUTURE OUTLOOK.</h4>
+
+<p>The problems discussed in the foregoing chapters
+have been concerned chiefly with the new colonies,
+for it is to them that we must look for the motive
+force to expedite union. They must long continue to
+be the most important factor in British South Africa,
+partly from their accidental position as the late theatre
+of war, and more especially from their wealth, the
+intricacy of their politics, the high level of ability
+among their inhabitants, the splendid chances of their
+future, and the delicacy of their present status. Union,
+if it comes, will come chiefly because of them; and in
+any union they will play a great, if not a dominant,
+part. Whither they pipe, South Africa must ultimately
+follow. But this is not because there can be
+any differentiation in value between the states, since
+all are self-subsistent and independent, but because in
+the new colonies the problems which chiefly concern
+South Africa&rsquo;s future are already naked to the eye
+and focussed for observation. The Transvaal will be
+important because within it the fight which concerns
+the whole future of the African colony will be fought
+to a finish. It will add to the problem some features
+which concern only itself, but the general lines it
+shares with its neighbours. The economic strife, the
+amalgamation of races, the native question, the movement
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</a></span>
+towards federation, with all its many aspects,
+and, last but not least, the intellectual and political
+development of its citizens,&mdash;this is the problem of the
+Transvaal, and in the gravest sense it is the problem
+of South Africa&rsquo;s future.</p>
+
+<p>In the preceding pages the separate questions have
+been briefly considered. But here we may note one
+truth which attaches to them all&mdash;the settlement of
+no single one is easy. Each will defy a supine statesmanship,
+and in each failure will be attended with
+serious disaster. Patience and a lithe intelligence
+can alone ensure success, and it is doubtful if that
+happy Providence which has now and then taken
+charge of our drifting and muddling will interfere
+in this province to save us from the consequences of
+folly. Every question stands on a needle-point.
+Mining development&mdash;if the wealth of the country is
+to be properly exploited&mdash;must continue as it has
+begun, utilising the highest engineering talent, and
+straining every nerve to extend the area over which
+profits can be made. The labour question requires
+tact and patience, prescience of future interests, a
+recognition of the needs of the complex organism
+of which it is but one aspect. The native question
+shows the same narrow margin between success and
+failure, and demands a degree of forethought and
+statesmanship which would be an exorbitant requirement
+were it not so vital a part of the social and
+economic future. Agriculture and settlement can
+only be made valuable by a close study of facts, and
+an intelligence which can correctly estimate data and
+bring to bear on them the latest results of experimental
+science. Finally, in its financial aspects the
+problem has a near resemblance to the most complicated
+of recent economic tasks, the re-settlement of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</a></span>
+Egypt. Burdened with a heavy debt, the country is
+speculating on its future and living on its capital.
+For the next few years it will in all likelihood
+achieve solvency; but the margin may be small,
+and the result may be secured only by the retention
+of certain revenue-producing charges at an unnatural
+figure. A considerable part of the debt will be applied
+to services which will make a good return in time, but
+for a little while revenue may barely cover disbursements.
+In finance, above all other provinces, there is
+need of a severe economy, coupled with a clear recognition
+of the country&rsquo;s needs and a judicious courage.
+It is a gamble, if you like, but with sleepless and
+ubiquitous watchfulness the odds are greatly in our
+favour. The very forces which fight against us, the
+complexity of economic and social interests, will
+become our servants, if properly understood, and will
+solidify and preserve our work, as the house fashioned
+of granite will stand when the building of sandstone
+will crumble. The shaping force of intelligence
+remains the one thing needful. Of high and just
+intentions there can be little doubt, but in the new
+South Africa we are more likely to be perplexed by
+the fool than the knave. Will the result, as Cromwell
+asked long ago, be &ldquo;answerable to the simplicity
+and honesty of the design&rdquo;? Neither to the one
+nor the other, but to that rarer endowment, political
+wisdom.</p>
+
+<p>So much for administrative problems. A country
+whose future is staked upon the intelligence of its
+Government and its people is an exhilarating spectacle
+to the better type of man. England has succeeded
+before on the same postulates and in harder circumstances.
+But there are certain subtler aspects of
+development, where the same high qualities are necessary,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</a></span>
+but where the end to be striven for is less clear.
+There is the fusion of the two races, an ideal if not a
+practical necessity. As has been said, a political union
+already exists after a fashion. There seems little
+reason to fear any future disruption, for on the
+material side Dutch interests are ours, and all are
+vitally concerned in the common prosperity. Administrative
+efficiency will make the Boer acquiesce
+in any form of government. But that which Lord
+Durham thought far more formidable, &ldquo;a struggle not
+of principles but of races,&rdquo; may continue for long in
+other departments than politics, unless we use extraordinary
+caution in our methods. The very advance
+of civilisation may militate against us by vivifying
+historical memories and rekindling a clearer flame of
+racial resentment. The Dutch have their own ideals,
+different from ours, but not incompatible with complete
+political union. Any attempt to do violence to their
+ideals, or any hasty and unconsidered imposition of
+unsuitable English forms, will throw back that work of
+spiritual incorporation which is the highest destiny of
+the country. They have a strong Church and a strong
+creed, certain educational ideas and social institutions
+which must long remain powers in the land. And let
+us remember that any South African civilisation must
+grow up on the soil, and must borrow much from the
+Dutch race, else it is no true growth but a frail exotic.
+It will borrow English principles but not English institutions,
+since, while principles are grafts from human
+needs, institutions are the incrusted mosses of time
+which do not bear transplanting. It is idle to talk
+of universities such as Oxford, or public schools like
+Winchester, and any attempt to tend such alien plants
+will be a waste of money and time. South Africa will
+create her own nurseries, and on very different lines.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</a></span>
+If we are burdened in our work with false parallels we
+shall fail, for nothing in the new country can survive
+which is not based on a clear-sighted survey of things
+as they are, and a renunciation of old formulas. Let
+us recognise that we cannot fuse the races by destroying
+the sacred places of one of them, but only by
+giving to the future generations some common heritage.
+&ldquo;If you unscotch us,&rdquo; wrote Sir Walter Scott to
+Croker, &ldquo;you will find us damned mischievous Englishmen,&rdquo;
+and it will be a very mischievous Dutchman
+who is coerced into unsuitable English ways and
+taught sentiments of which he has no understanding.
+When a people arise who have a common culture
+bequeathed from their fathers, and who look back
+upon Ladysmith and Colenso, the Great Trek and the
+Peninsular War, as incidents in a common pedigree,
+then we shall have fusion indeed, a union in spirit and
+in truth. Nothing which has in it the stuff of life can
+ever die, and there is something of this vitality in the
+Dutch tradition. Our own is stronger, wider, resting
+on greater historical foundations, and therefore it will
+more readily attract and absorb the lesser. But the
+lesser will live, transformed, indeed, but none the less
+a real part of the spiritual heritage of a nation where
+there will be no racial cleavage. The consummation is
+not yet, and, maybe, will be long delayed. It will not
+be in our time; perhaps our sons may see it; certainly,
+I think, our grandchildren will be very near it.
+Such a development cannot be artificially hastened,
+and all that we can do is to see that no barriers of our
+own making are allowed to intervene. Meantime we
+have a <i>de facto</i> political union to make the most of.</p>
+
+<p>What manner of men are the citizens of this new
+nation to be? They will have the vigour which
+belongs to colonial parentage, the freshness of outlook
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</a></span>
+and freedom from old shibboleths. But they
+should have more. They start as no colony has
+ever started, with the echoes of a great war still
+in their ears, with a highly developed industry and
+the chances of great wealth, and with a population
+showing as high a level of intelligence as any in
+the world. The nature of their problem will compel
+them to remain intellectually active, and as the eyes
+of the world are on them they will have few temptations
+to lethargy. They may take foolish steps and
+be beguiled into rash experiments, but I do not think
+they will stagnate. And for this people so much alive
+there is the chance of an indigenous culture, born
+of the old, when they have leisure to make it theirs,
+and the freshening influences of their new land and
+their strenuous life. South Africa cannot help herself.
+She must play a large part in imperial politics;
+her views on economic questions will be listened to
+by all the world; a political future, good or bad,
+she must accept and make the most of. But behind
+it all there is the prospect of that intimate self-development,
+that progress in thought, in the arts,
+in the amenities of life, which, like righteousness,
+exalteth a nation. The finest of all experiments is
+to unite an older civilisation with the natural freshness
+of a virgin soil, and she, alone among the colonies
+which have ever been founded, has the power to make
+it. Not only is it a new land, but it is Africa,
+a corner of that mysterious continent to which the
+eyes of dreamers and adventurers have always turned.
+The boundaries of the unknown are shrinking daily,
+and where our forefathers marked only lions and
+behemoths on the map, we set down a hundred
+names and a dozen trading stations. The winds
+which blow from the hills of the north tell no
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</a></span>
+longer of mystic interior kingdoms and uncounted
+treasures. We know most things nowadays, and
+have given our knowledge the prosaic form of joint-stock
+companies. But the proverb still justifies itself.<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a>
+Africa is still a home of the incalculable, not wholly
+explored or explorable, still a hinterland to which
+the youth of the south can push forward in search
+of fortune, and from which that breath of romance,
+which is the life of the English race, can inspire
+thinkers and song-makers. Girdled on three sides
+by the ocean, and on the fourth looking north to
+the inland seas and the eternal snows of Ruwenzori&mdash;I
+can imagine no nobler cradle for a race. I have
+said that a structure built with difficulty is the most
+lasting. Her complex problems will knit together
+the sinews of intelligence and national character,
+and the great commonplaces of policy, so eternally
+true, so inexorable in their application, will become
+part of her creed, not from lip-service but from the
+sweat and toil of practical work. If to these she
+can add other commonplaces, still older and more
+abiding, of civic duty, of the intellectual life, of
+moral purpose, she will present to history that most
+rare and formidable of combinations, intellect and
+vitality, will and reason, culture guiding and inspiring
+an unhesitating gift for action.</p>
+
+<p>There is already a school of political thought in
+South Africa, a small school, and thus far so ill-defined
+that it has no common programme to put
+before a world which barely recognises its existence.
+It owes its inspiration to Mr Rhodes, but its founder
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[Pg 393]</a></span>
+left it no legacy of doctrine beyond a certain instinct
+for great things, a fire of imagination, and a brooding
+energy. Its members are very practical men,
+landowners, mine-owners, rich, capable, with nothing
+of the ideologue in their air, the last people one
+would naturally go to for ambitions which could not
+be easily reduced to pounds sterling. But they are
+of the school: at heart they are pioneers, the cyclopean
+architects of new lands. It is one of South
+Africa&rsquo;s paradoxes that there should exist among
+successful and matter-of-fact men of business a
+hungry fidelity to ideals for which we look in vain
+among the doctrinaires who do them facile homage.
+And they are also very practical in their aims. Mr
+Rhodes never desired a paper empire or that vague
+thing called territorial prestige. What filled his
+imagination was the thought of new nations of our
+blood living a free and wholesome life and turning
+the wilderness into a habitable place. He strove
+not for profit but for citizens, for a breathing-space,
+a playground, for the future. The faults of his
+methods and the imperfections of his aims, which
+are so curiously our own English faults and imperfections,
+may have hindered the realisation of his
+dreams, but they did not impair that legacy of
+daimonic force which he left to his countrymen.
+You may find it in South Africa to-day, and if you
+rightly understand it and feel its hidden movements
+you will be aghast at your own parochialism. It is
+slow and patient, knowing that &ldquo;the counsels to
+which Time hath not been called Time will not
+ratify.&rdquo; But with Time on its side it is confident,
+and it will not easily be thwarted.</p>
+
+<p>Excursions in colonial psychology are rarely illuminating,
+lacking as a rule both sympathy and knowledge;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[Pg 394]</a></span>
+but on one trait there is a singular unanimity. The
+two chief obstacles to imperial unity, so runs a saying,
+are the bumptious colonial and the supercilious Englishman.
+I readily grant the latter, but is the first
+fairly described? A colonist is naturally prone to
+self-assertion in certain walks of life. If he creates
+an industry alone and from the start in the teeth
+of hardships, having had to begin from the very beginning,
+he is apt to lose perspective and unduly
+magnify his work. If he owns a bakery, it is the
+finest in the world, at any rate in the British Empire.
+He compares his doings with his neighbours&rsquo; within
+his limited horizon, and he is scarcely to be blamed if
+he brags a little. His bravado is only ridiculous when
+taken out of its surroundings, and at the worst is more
+a mannerism than an affection of mind. But on the
+intellectual side he is, in my judgment, conspicuously
+humble, a groper after the viewless things whose
+omnipotence he feels dimly. To the home-bred man
+history is a commonplace to be taken for granted; to
+the colonist who has shaped a workaday life from the
+wilds, it is a vast mother of mystery. Traditions,
+customs, standards staled to us by the vain emphasis
+of generations, rise before him as revelations and
+shrines of immortal wisdom. What to us is rhetoric
+is to him the finest poetry; and for this reason in
+politics he is prone to follow imaginative schemes,
+without testing them by his native caution. Our
+somewhat weary intellectual world is a temple which
+he is ready to approach with uncovered head. It is
+not mere innocence, but rather, I think, that freshness
+of outlook and optimism which he gathers from his
+new land and his contact with the beginnings of
+things. Truth and beauty remain the same: it is
+only the symbols and the mirrors which grow dim
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[Pg 395]</a></span>
+with time; and to the man who is sufficiently near to
+understand the symbols, and sufficiently aloof to see
+no flaw or tawdriness, there is a double share of happiness.
+The superficial assurance, the &ldquo;bumptiousness&rdquo;
+of the saying, is surely a small matter if behind it
+there is this true modesty of spirit.</p>
+
+<p>A national life presumes union, but South African
+federation is simply a step to a larger goal. It may
+be objected that in the foregoing chapters the cardinal
+problem is treated as less the fusion of the two races
+than the development of South Africa on certain lines
+within our colonial system. Such has been the intention
+of the book. The Dutch have accepted the new
+<i>régime</i>; they will fight, if they fight, on constitutional
+lines under our ægis and within our Empire, and in a
+sense it may be said that racial union on the political
+side already exists. But the further political development
+of the country, as self-consciousness is slowly
+gained&mdash;that, indeed, is a matter on which hang great
+issues, good or bad, for the English people. Because the
+furnace has been so hot, the metal will emerge pure or
+it will not emerge at all. A new colony, or rather a
+new nation, will have been created, or another will have
+been added to the catalogue of our infrequent failures,
+and the loose territorial mass known as South Africa
+will become the prey of any wandering demagogue or
+aspiring foreign Power. Our late opponents will take
+their revenge, if they seek it, not by reviving the
+impossible creed of Dutch supremacy, but by retarding
+South Africa from what is her highest destiny and her
+worthiest line of development. Her future, if she will
+accept it, is to be a pioneer in imperial federation: a
+pioneer, because she has felt more than any other
+colony the evils of disintegration, the vices of the old
+colonial system, the insecurity of government from
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[Pg 396]</a></span>
+above, and at the same time is in a position to realise
+the weakness of that independence which is also isolation.
+This is not the place to enter upon so vast a
+question. To many it is the greatest of modern political
+dreams. Without it imperialism becomes empty
+rhetoric and braggadocio, a tissue of dessicated phrases,
+worthy of the worst accusations with which its enemies
+have assailed it. Without it our Empire is neither
+secure from aggression nor politically sound nor commercially
+solvent. Within it alone can any true scheme
+of common defence be realised. Moreover, it is the
+glamour needed to give to colonial politics that wider
+imaginative outlook which England enjoys in virtue of
+a long descent. Colonial politics tend to become at
+times narrow and provincial; in a federation they would
+gain that larger view and ampler pride which a man
+feels who, believing himself to be humbly born, learns
+for the first time that he is the scion of a famous house.
+Their kinship, instead of the long-remembered sentiment
+of a descendant, would become the intimate
+loyalty of a colleague. And home politics also would
+lose the provincialism, equally vicious, if historically
+more interesting, which lies somewhere near the root
+of our gravest errors, and in relinquishing a facile
+imperialism find an empire which needs no rhetoric
+to enhance its splendour.</p>
+
+<p>But before South Africa can become an ally in
+federation she must make her peace with herself. If
+it is difficult to exaggerate the need for untiring intelligence
+in the making of this peace, it is even harder
+to over-estimate the profound significance which her
+success or failure in the task of self-realisation has for
+the prestige of our race. Our colonial methods are
+on trial in a sphere where all the world can watch.
+And while our aim is a colony, the means must be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[Pg 397]</a></span>
+different from those which we have hitherto used in
+our expansion. A nascent colony was neglected till
+it asserted itself and appeared already mature on the
+political horizon. But in the growth of this colony
+England must play a direct part, since for good or for
+ill her destinies are linked with it, and supineness and
+a foolish interference will equally bring disaster. There
+is one parallel, not indeed in political conditions, but
+in the qualities required for the shaping of the country.
+If we can show in South Africa that spirit of sleepless
+intelligence which has created British India, then there
+is nothing to fear. For, as I understand history, India
+was made by Englishmen who brought to the task
+three qualities above others. The first was a wide
+toleration for local customs and religions&mdash;a desire to
+leave the national life intact, and to mould it slowly
+by those forces of enlightenment in which sincerely, if
+undogmatically, they believed. The second was the
+extension of rigorous justice and full civil rights to
+every subject, a policy which in the long-run is the
+only means of bringing a subject race into the life of
+the State. Last, and most vital of all, they showed in
+their work a complete efficiency, proving themselves
+better statesmen, financiers, jurists, soldiers, than any
+class they had superseded. This efficiency is the key-note
+of the South African problem, so far as concerns
+British interests. If the imperial Power shows itself
+inspired with energy, acumen, a clear-eyed perception
+of truth as well as with its traditional honesty of purpose,
+South Africa will gladly follow where it may
+lead. But she will be quick to criticise formalism and
+intolerant of a fumbling incapacity.</p>
+
+<p><i>Sed nondum est finis.</i> We stand at the beginning
+of a new path, and it is impossible to tell whither it
+may lead, what dark fords and stony places it may
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[Pg 398]</a></span>
+pass through, and in what sandy desert or green champaign
+it may end. Political prophecy is an idle occupation.
+American observers on the eve of the French
+Revolution saw England on the verge of anarchy and
+France a contented country under a beloved king.
+Even so acute a writer as de Tocqueville assumed
+that America would continue an agricultural country
+without manufactures, and that the fortunes of her
+citizens would be small. If philosophers may err, it
+is well for a humble writer to be modest in his conclusions.
+In the past pages an effort has been made
+neither to minimise the difficulties nor to over-estimate
+the chances of South African prosperity. &ldquo;Whosoever,&rdquo;
+said Ralegh, &ldquo;in writing a modern history shall
+follow truth too near the heels, it may haply strike
+out his teeth.&rdquo; I can ask for no better fate than to
+see all my forecasts falsified, the dangers proved to
+have no existence, the chances shown a thousandfold
+more roseate. But whatever may be the destiny of
+this or that observation, there can be no dispute, I
+think, upon the gravity of the problem and the profound
+importance of its wise settlement. And when
+all is said that can be said it is permissible to import
+into our view a little of that ancestral optimism which
+has hitherto kept our hearts high in our checkered
+history, for optimism, when buttressed by intelligence,
+is but another name for courage. There is an optimism
+more merciless than any pessimism, which, seeing
+clearly all the perils and discouragements, the hollowness
+of smooth conventional counsels and the dreary
+list of past errors, can yet pluck up heart to believe
+that there is no work too hard for the English race
+when its purpose is firm and its intelligence awakened.
+With this belief we may well look forward to a day
+when the old unhappy things will have become far
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[Pg 399]</a></span>
+off and forgotten, and South Africa, at peace with herself,
+will be the leader in a new and pregnant imperial
+policy; and the words of the poet of another empire
+will be true in a nobler and ampler sense of ours,
+&ldquo;They who drink of the Rhone and the Orontes are
+all one nation.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a>
+&ldquo;Out of Africa comes ever some new thing&rdquo; is generally quoted
+in the Latin of Pliny, but it is probably as old as the first Ionian
+adventurers who sailed to Egypt or heard wild Ph&oelig;nician tales. It is
+found in Aristotle: <ins title="Legetai tis paroimia hoti aei pherei Libyê ti kainon">&#923;&#8051;&#947;&#949;&#964;&#945;&#8055; &#964;&#953;&#962;
+&#960;&#945;&#961;&#959;&#953;&#956;&#8055;&#945; &#8005;&#964;&#953;
+&#7936;&#949;&#8054; &#966;&#8051;&#961;&#949;&#953; &#923;&#953;&#946;&#8059;&#951;
+&#964;&#953; &#954;&#945;&#953;&#957;&#8057;&#957;</ins> (Hist.
+Anim., viii. 28).</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[Pg 400]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>INDEX.</h2>
+
+<hr class="short" />
+
+<p class="center"><a name="ind" id="ind">&nbsp;</a>
+<a href="#A">A</a> <a href="#B">B</a> <a href="#C">C</a>
+<a href="#D">D</a> <a href="#E">E</a> <a href="#F">F</a>
+<a href="#G">G</a> <a href="#H">H</a> <a href="#I">I</a>
+<a href="#J">J</a> <a href="#K">K</a> <a href="#L">L</a>
+<a href="#M">M</a> <a href="#N">N</a> <a href="#O">O</a>
+<a href="#P">P</a> <a href="#R">R</a> <a href="#S">S</a>
+<a href="#T">T</a> <a href="#U">U</a> <a href="#V">V</a>
+<a href="#W">W</a> <a href="#Z">Z</a>
+</p>
+
+<div class="index">
+<p class="letter"><a name="A" id="A" href="#ind">A</a></p>
+
+<p>Agricultural Bureau of the United States, the, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Agricultural prospects in South Africa, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>-<a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Altenroxel, Mr H. S., <a href="#Page_121">121</a>-<a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Amsterdam, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>-<a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Angling in South Africa, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>-<a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Angoni, the, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Arabs, the, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Army in South Africa, the, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>-<a href="#Page_385">385</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">value of training ground, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">necessity of reorganisation on new model, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>-<a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Assegai River, the, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Athole, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Australia, land legislation in, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>-<a href="#Page_279">279</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">labour party in, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">federation of, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>-<a href="#Page_365">365</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">local forces in, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Austro-Hungary, parallel with, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="B" id="B" href="#ind">B</a></p>
+
+<p>Baines, Mr, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bantu races, the. See <a href="#Kaffir">Kaffir</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Barberton, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Barnard, Lady Anne, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Barolongs, the, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Baronga, the, <a href="#Footnote_8_8">30 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Barreto, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Footnote_6_6">27 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Basutoland, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bataungs, the, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bechuanaland, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Belfast, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bell&rsquo;s Kop, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bent&rsquo;s &lsquo;Ruined Cities of Mashonaland&rsquo; quoted, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bethel, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bezuidenhout, Frederick, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bilad Ghana, discovery of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Birds of South Africa, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>-<a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Blaauwberg, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bleloch, Mr W., quoted, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bloemfontein, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bloemfontein Conference of March 1903, the, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bloemhof, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Boers" id="Boers">Boers, the</a>, origin of, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">as hunters, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>-<a href="#Page_54">54</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">horsemanship of, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">character of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>-<a href="#Page_76">76</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">farming methods of, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>-<a href="#Page_260">260</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">political attitude of, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>-<a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Boschdaal, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Botha, General, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Brak River, the (Zoutpansberg), <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bruderstroom, the, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bruintje Hoogte, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bryce, Mr James, quoted, <a href="#Footnote_27_27">271 n.</a>, <a href="#Footnote_30_30">326 n.</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Footnote_35_35">355 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Buffalo River, the, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Bushmen, the, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Byles, Mr, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="C" id="C" href="#ind">C</a></p>
+
+<p>Cabral, Pedro Alvarez, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Calicut, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Callaway, Bishop, his works, <a href="#Footnote_3_3">14 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Cam, Diego, his discovery of the Congo, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Canada, nature of federation of, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">local forces in, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>.</span><br />
+<span class="indent">See Durham, Lord.</span></p>
+
+<p>Cape Colony, native taxation in, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">constitution of, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">franchise in, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">local forces in, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Cape of Good Hope, discovery of, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[Pg 401]</a></span>Carolina, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Casalis, M., <a href="#Footnote_3_3">14 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Castrol&rsquo;s Nek, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Celliers, Sarel, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Cetewayo, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Climate, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Coal, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Commando Nek, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Compensation, to slave-owners in Cape Colony, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">to loyalists in Cape Colony and Natal, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Compies River, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Congo Free State, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Conquered territory, the, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Constabulary, the South African, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Constitutie</i> of Orange Free State, the, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>-<a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Conto, Portuguese writer, quoted, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Copper-mining, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Coster River, the, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Cost of gold-mining, <a href="#Footnote_16_16">203 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Cost of living in new colonies, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Crocodile Poort, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-<a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Crocodile River, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>. See <a href="#Limpopo">Limpopo</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Crown Colony administration, nature of, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>-<a href="#Page_334">334</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Customs Union, the South African, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>-<a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="D" id="D" href="#ind">D</a></p>
+
+<p>da Gama, Vasco, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</p>
+
+<p>d&rsquo;Albuquerque, Affonso, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Damaraland, German acquisition of, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</p>
+
+<p>de Barros, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</p>
+
+<p>de Buys, Conrad, story of, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Decentralisation, colonial, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">administration in Transvaal, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Delarey, General, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</p>
+
+<p>de Silveira, Gonsalvo, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Diamonds, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Dias, Diniz, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Diaz, Bartolomeo, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Dingaan, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Dingiswayo, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</p>
+
+<p>do Espirito Santa, Luiz, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Dominicans in East Africa, the, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</p>
+
+<p>dos Santos, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Drakensberg Mountains, the, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Durham, Lord, his Report on Canada, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Dutch East India Company founded, the, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Dutch, the. See <a href="#Boers">Boers</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="E" id="E" href="#ind">E</a></p>
+
+<p>Education, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Egypt, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">comparison of South Africa with, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Elands River (Lydenburg), <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Elands River (Rustenburg), <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Ericsen, Mr, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Ermelo, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Expenditure of Transvaal, the normal, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="F" id="F" href="#ind">F</a></p>
+
+<p>Federation, Imperial, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Federation of South Africa, the, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>-<a href="#Page_367">367</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">advantages of, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>-<a href="#Page_353">353</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">tendencies towards, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>-<a href="#Page_355">355</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">tendencies against, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>-<a href="#Page_358">358</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">the first steps towards, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>-<a href="#Page_363">363</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">nature of, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>-<a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Forestry in the Transvaal, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Fourteen Streams, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Franchise in the new colonies, axioms which govern, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">types of, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">division of constituencies, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Francis, Mr, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Frere, Sir Bartle, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Fura, Mount, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="G" id="G" href="#ind">G</a></p>
+
+<p>Game laws in Transvaal, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>-<a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Game reserves, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Glenelg, Lord, his Kaffir policy, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Glen Grey Act, the, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Goa, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Gold, how found in Transvaal, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>-<a href="#Page_194">194</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">quartz and alluvial, mining for, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">nature of industry, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>-<a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Gold Law Commission, Report of, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>-<a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Gordon-Cumming, Mr, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Graaff-Reinet, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Greylingstad, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Grey, Sir George, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Grondwet</i>, the Transvaal, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Guaranteed Loan, the, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>-<a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="H" id="H" href="#ind">H</a></p>
+
+<p>Haenertsburg, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Hall and Neal, Messrs, their &lsquo;Ancient Ruins of Rhodesia,&rsquo; <a href="#Footnote_2_2">10 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Harrier packs, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Harrismith, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Hartley, Mr, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Havilah, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Heidelberg, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[Pg 402]</a></span>
+Henry the Navigator, Prince, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>-<a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</p>
+
+<p>High Commissionership, functions of, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Hillier, Dr A., quoted, <a href="#Footnote_1_1">6 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Himyarites. See Sabæans.</p>
+
+<p>History of South Africa, difficulties in way of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Hottentots, the, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Huguenot strain in the Boers, the, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="I" id="I" href="#ind">I</a></p>
+
+<p>India, <a href="#Footnote_17_17">208 n.</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Ingwenya Mountains, the, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Inhambane, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Inter-Colonial Council, the, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>-<a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>-<a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Irene, Mr van der Byl&rsquo;s park at, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Iron ore, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Irrigation, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="J" id="J" href="#ind">J</a></p>
+
+<p>Jacottet, M., his works on folk-lore, <a href="#Footnote_3_3">14 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Jesuits in East Africa, the, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Jew, the, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Johannesburg, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>-<a href="#Page_324">324</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">description of, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">false ideas of, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">force of social persistence in, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>-<a href="#Page_317">317</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">critical position of, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">present stage of development, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">labour party in, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">solidarity of spirit in, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Johnston, Sir Harry, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Joubert&rsquo;s Hoogte, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Junod, M., his works on folk-lore, <a href="#Footnote_3_3">14 n.</a>, <a href="#Footnote_8_8">30 n.</a></p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="K" id="K" href="#ind">K</a></p>
+
+<p><a name="Kaffir" id="Kaffir">Kaffir races, the</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">religion and law of, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">folk-lore of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Footnote_8_8">30 n.</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">superstitions of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">as hunters, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">as farmers, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">their political future, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>-<a href="#Page_310">310</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">taxation of, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>-<a href="#Page_301">301</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">education of, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Kalahari, the, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Keane, Professor, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Footnote_2_2">10 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Kirk, the Dutch, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Klerksdorp, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Komati Poort, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Komati River, the, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Korannafontein, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Koranna tribe, the, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Krabbefontein, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Kruger, Paul, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="L" id="L" href="#ind">L</a></p>
+
+<p>Labour party in the Transvaal, the, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>-<a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Labour question in the Transvaal, the, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>-<a href="#Page_214">214</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">nature of labour on mines, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">Kaffir labour, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">Central African labour, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">white labour, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>-<a href="#Page_208">208</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">Asiatic labour, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>-<a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">labour for the railways, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">compulsory labour, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>-<a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Lake Banagher, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Lake Chrissie, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Land settlement in South Africa, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">sums alloted for, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>-<a href="#Page_283">283</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">extent of Crown land, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">political importance of settlement, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>-<a href="#Page_273">273</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">Government scheme of, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>-<a href="#Page_280">280</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">comparison with Australasian precedents, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>-<a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Lebombo flats, the, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Lebombo hills, the, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Legislative Councils of Transvaal and Orange River Colony, the, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Letaba River, the, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>-<a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Letsitela River, the, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Leydsdorp, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Lichtenburg, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Lichtenstein, his &lsquo;Travels in South Africa,&rsquo; <a href="#Footnote_9_9">36 n.</a></p>
+
+<p><a name="Limpopo" id="Limpopo">Limpopo River, the</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Linschoten, publication of his works, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Livingstone, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Lobengula, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Louis Trichard, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Lydenburg, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="M" id="M" href="#ind">M</a></p>
+
+<p>Macdonald, John, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Machadodorp, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Machadodorp-Carolina railway, the, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Machubi, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Mackenzie, John, quoted, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Magalakween River, the, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Magaliesberg, the, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>-<a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Magata, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Magata&rsquo;s Nek, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Magatoland, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Main Reef formation, extent of, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Majajie&rsquo;s location, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Makalanga, the, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>-<a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Makasi Spruit, the, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Malapoch, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[Pg 403]</a></span>
+Malietsie&rsquo;s location, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Malmani Oog, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>-<a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Manicaland, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Manuza, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Marah, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Marico, river and district, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Maritz, Gerrit, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Market, nature of, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Mashonaland, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Mazimba, the, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Middelburg, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Missionaries, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Monomotapa, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>-<a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Mont aux Sources, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Mooi River, the, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Mosega, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Moshesh, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Mosilikatse, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>-<a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Mountaineering in South Africa, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Mozambique, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Municipal government in Transvaal, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Murchison Hills, the, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mynpacht</i>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="N" id="N" href="#ind">N</a></p>
+
+<p>Natal, discovery of, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">native taxation in, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">constitution of, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">franchise in, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">local forces in, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Native Labour Association, the, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Natives. See <a href="#Kaffir">Kaffirs</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Nauraghes, the Sardinian, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Neolithic age, traces of, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Netherlands railway, the, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</p>
+
+<p>New Scotland, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Nomenclature, Dutch, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Nyl, the river, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Nylstroom, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="O" id="O" href="#ind">O</a></p>
+
+<p>Occupation farms in Transvaal, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Ogilby&rsquo;s &lsquo;Itinerarium Angliæ&rsquo; quoted, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Olifant&rsquo;s Poort, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Olifant&rsquo;s River, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Ophir, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Orange River Colony, the, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">railway system of, <a href="#Footnote_20_20">217 n.</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">financial position of, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">taxation of natives in, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">census of, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Oswell, Mr, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Ovampas, the, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="P" id="P" href="#ind">P</a></p>
+
+<p>Palæolithic age, traces of, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Panda, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Parties in the Transvaal, probable division of, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Ph&oelig;nicians, the, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Pietersburg, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Piet Potgieter&rsquo;s Rust, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Piet Retief, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Pongola River, the, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Portuguese in East Africa, the, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">their age of discovery, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>-<a href="#Page_24">24</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">their African empire, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>-<a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Potchefstroom, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Potgieter, Andries, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Prazos, the Portuguese, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Prester John, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Pretoria, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Pretoria-Pietersburg railway, the, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Pungwe River, the, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="R" id="R" href="#ind">R</a></p>
+
+<p>Railway Extension Conference, the, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Railway system in South Africa, the, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>-<a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">revenue of, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Reitz, Mr F. W., his songs, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Repatriation, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Retief, Pieter, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Revenue of Transvaal, the, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>-<a href="#Page_241">241</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">mining revenue, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Rhodes, Mr C. J., his native policy, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">his policy of federation, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">his influence on South African politics, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Rhodesia, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>-<a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Rooijantjesfontein, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Rooi Rand, the, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Rustenburg, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>-<a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Ruwenzori, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="S" id="S" href="#ind">S</a></p>
+
+<p>Sabæans, the, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Sabi game preserve, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Sabi River, the, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Sand River, the (Zoutpansberg), <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Sardinha, Manoel, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Schlichter, Dr, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Footnote_2_2">10 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Schoon Spruit, the, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Scriptural parallels, the Boer sense of, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Selati railway, the, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Selons River, the, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Selous, Mr, quoted, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[Pg 404]</a></span>
+Sharpe, Sir A., <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Slaangaapies mountains, the, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>-<a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Slachter&rsquo;s Nek, story of, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Slave question in Cape Colony, the, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>-<a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Smith, Sir Harry, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Sofala, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>-<a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Somerset, Lord Charles, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Spelonken, the, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Springbok Flats, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Footnote_26_26">265 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Springs-Ermelo railway, the, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Squatters&rsquo; law, the, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Standerton, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Stock diseases, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">prevention of, <a href="#Footnote_24_24">262 n.</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Swaziland, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>-<a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="T" id="T" href="#ind">T</a></p>
+
+<p>Taqui, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Tarshish, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Taxation in Transvaal, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">of unoccupied lands, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">of share quotations, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Tchaka, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>-<a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Tete, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Thaba Bosigo, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Thaba &rsquo;Nchu, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Theal, Dr, his work, <a href="#Footnote_3_3">14 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Tobacco-growing, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Transvaal, estimated population of, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Trek" id="Trek">Trek, the Great</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>-<a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Trichard, Louis, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Trout Acclimatisation Society of the Transvaal, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Trusts, possibility of, in South Africa, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>-<a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="U" id="U" href="#ind">U</a></p>
+
+<p>Umpilusi River, the, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Usutu River, the, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Uys, the family of, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="V" id="V" href="#ind">V</a></p>
+
+<p>Van Rensburg, Jan, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Van Riebeck, Jan, <a href="#Footnote_19_19">210 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Van Rooyen, Mr, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Vechtkop, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Veld, nature of, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">bush veld, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">veld fires, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">quality of soil of, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Vergunnings</i>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Volksraad, the, of the Orange Free State, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;<br />
+<span class="indent">of the Transvaal, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</span><br />
+<span class="indent">second, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</span></p>
+
+<p>Volunteer forces in South Africa, the, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Footnote_40_40">380 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Voortrekkers, the. See <a href="#Trek">Trek, the Great</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="W" id="W" href="#ind">W</a></p>
+
+<p>Wakkerstroom, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</p>
+
+<p>War debt, the, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>-<a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Warm Baths, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Waterberg, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Werfs</i>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Willcocks, Sir W., his Report on Irrigation, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Wilmot, Mr A., his &lsquo;Monomotapa,&rsquo; <a href="#Footnote_2_2">10 n.</a>, <a href="#Footnote_7_7">28 n.</a></p>
+
+<p>Winburg, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Wolkberg, the, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Wolmaranstad, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Wood Bush, the, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>-<a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</p>
+
+<p class="letter"><a name="Z" id="Z" href="#ind">Z</a></p>
+
+<p>Zambesi River, the, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Zeerust, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>-<a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Zimbabwes, the, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>-<a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Zoutpansberg, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>-<a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Zulus, the, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<p class="center padbase">THE END.</p>
+
+<p class="center">PRINTED BY WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS.</p>
+
+<hr class="long" />
+
+<div class="tnborder">
+<p class="tntitle"><a name="endnote" id="endnote">TRANSCRIBER&rsquo;S NOTE</a></p>
+
+<p>The following changes were made to the original text:</p>
+
+<div class="tnindent">
+<p>Page 23,&nbsp;&nbsp;"Muslin" changed to "Muslim" (with Muslim pilgrims)</p>
+
+<p>Page 280, "other" changed to "another" (for another two)</p>
+
+<p>Page 376, £ restored to Footnote 39 (£270,000)</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>All other inconsistencies in spellings and hyphenations were retained
+as printed in the original text.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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